Nature-Inspired
Nanoarray Catalyst toward Balanced
Heat and Mass Transport in Photothermal Catalysis
Posted on 2025-05-10 - 16:04
Photothermal catalysis represents a clean, efficient,
and sustainable
approach to harnessing solar energy to drive chemical reactions. However,
the inherent trade-off between mass and heat transport efficiencies
poses significant challenges to its applicability. Herein, a nature-inspired
hollow silica nanocone array catalyst (HSNCA/Co) is developed to address
this limitation by enhancing the heat management and sunlight-absorptive
ability, while maintaining the exposure of active sites. The nanocone
array structure creates dual-flow-rate regions that enable the multidimensional
optimization of thermal management and simultaneous mitigation of
all three primary heat dissipation pathways. Moreover, the dense silica
array enhances light trapping and plasmon coupling efficacy, achieving
nearly 99% broadband absorption. In a CO2 hydrogenation
model reaction, this system achieved a CO2 conversion rate
of 4427.2 mmol gCo–1 h–1 under intense illumination, achieving one of the highest reported
performances among cobalt-based catalysts. This study emphasizes the
role of light-to-heat conversion in photothermal catalysis and offers
a potential strategy for the design of catalytic materials.
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Yu, Kewei; Feng, Kai; Cai, Mujin; Li, Hai; Zhou, Yuxuan; Shen, Jiahui; et al. (2025). Nature-Inspired
Nanoarray Catalyst toward Balanced
Heat and Mass Transport in Photothermal Catalysis. ACS Publications. Collection. https://doi.org/10.1021/acsnano.5c03061