Plasmonic Switching of the Reaction Pathway: Visible-Light Irradiation Varies the Reactant Concentration at the Solid-Solution Interface of a Gold-Cobalt Catalyst.
Erandi PeirisSarina SarinaEric R WaclawikGodwin A AyokoPengfei HanJianfeng JiaHuai Yong ZhuPublished in: Angewandte Chemie (International ed. in English) (2019)
Product selectivity of alkyne hydroamination over catalytic Au2 Co alloy nanoparticles (NPs) can be made switchable by a light-on/light-off process, yielding imine (cross-coupling product of aniline and alkyne) under visible-light irradiation, but 1,4-diphenylbutadiyne in the dark. The low-flux light irradiation concentrates aniline on the catalyst, accelerating the catalytic cross-coupling by several orders of magnitude even at a very low overall aniline concentrations (1.0×10-3 mol L-1 ). A tentative mechanism is that Au2 Co NPs absorb light, generating an intense fringing electromagnetic field and hot electrons. The sharp field-gradient (plasmonic optical force) can selectively enhance adsorption of light-polarizable aniline molecules on the catalyst. The light irradiation thereby alters the aniline/alkyne ratio at the NPs surface, switching product selectivity. This represents a new paradigm to modify a catalysis process by light.