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Epitaxial growth of highly symmetrical branched noble metal-semiconductor heterostructures with efficient plasmon-induced hot-electron transfer.

Li ZhaiSara T GebreBo ChenDan XuJunze ChenZijian LiYawei LiuHua YangChongyi LingYiyao GeWei ZhaiChangsheng ChenLu MaQinghua ZhangXuefei LiYujie YanXinyu HuangLujiang LiZhiqiang GuanChen-Lei TaoZhiqi HuangHongyi WangJinze LiangYe ZhuChun-Sing LeePeng WangChun-Feng ZhangLin GuYong-Hua DuTianquan LianHua ZhangXue-Jun Wu
Published in: Nature communications (2023)
Epitaxial growth is one of the most commonly used strategies to precisely tailor heterostructures with well-defined compositions, morphologies, crystal phases, and interfaces for various applications. However, as epitaxial growth requires a small interfacial lattice mismatch between the components, it remains a challenge for the epitaxial synthesis of heterostructures constructed by materials with large lattice mismatch and/or different chemical bonding, especially the noble metal-semiconductor heterostructures. Here, we develop a noble metal-seeded epitaxial growth strategy to prepare highly symmetrical noble metal-semiconductor branched heterostructures with desired spatial configurations, i.e., twenty CdS (or CdSe) nanorods epitaxially grown on twenty exposed (111) facets of Ag icosahedral nanocrystal, albeit a large lattice mismatch (more than 40%). Importantly, a high quantum yield (QY) of plasmon-induced hot-electron transferred from Ag to CdS was observed in epitaxial Ag-CdS icosapods (18.1%). This work demonstrates that epitaxial growth can be achieved in heterostructures composed of materials with large lattice mismatches. The constructed epitaxial noble metal-semiconductor interfaces could be an ideal platform for investigating the role of interfaces in various physicochemical processes.
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