Login / Signup

Hot Holes Assist Plasmonic Nanoelectrode Dissolution.

Alexander Al-ZubeidiBenjamin S HoenerSean S E CollinsWenxiao WangSilke R KirchnerSeyyed Ali Hosseini JebeliAnneli JoplinWei-Shun ChangStephan LinkChristy F Landes
Published in: Nano letters (2019)
Strong light-absorbing properties allow plasmonic metal nanoparticles to serve as antennas for other catalysts to function as photocatalysts. To achieve plasmonic photocatalysis, the hot charge carriers created when light is absorbed must be harnessed before they decay through internal relaxation pathways. We demonstrate the role of photogenerated hot holes in the oxidative dissolution of individual gold nanorods with millisecond time resolution while tuning charge-carrier density and photon energy using snapshot hyperspectral imaging. We show that light-induced hot charge carriers enhance the rate of gold oxidation and subsequent electrodissolution. Importantly, we distinguish how hot holes generated from interband transitions versus hot holes around the Fermi level contribute to photooxidative dissolution. The results provide new insights into hot-hole-driven processes with relevance to photocatalysis while emphasizing the need for statistical descriptions of nonequilibrium processes on innately heterogeneous nanoparticle supports.
Keyphrases
  • visible light
  • single molecule
  • nitric oxide
  • mass spectrometry
  • quantum dots
  • silver nanoparticles