Publication | Closed Access
Quantum tunneling injection of hot electrons in Au/TiO<sub>2</sub>plasmonic photocatalysts
93
Citations
91
References
2017
Year
Visible light absorption of plasmonic Au nanoparticles supported on semiconductor TiO<sub>2</sub> leads to injection of their photoactivated "hot electrons (e<sub>hot</sub><sup>-</sup>)" into the TiO<sub>2</sub> conduction band. This charge separation facilitates several oxidation and reduction reactions. These plasmonic systems, however, suffer from low quantum yields because the Schottky barrier created at the Au-TiO<sub>2</sub> interface suppresses e<sub>hot</sub><sup>-</sup> injection. Here we report that Au nanoparticles supported on the anatase particles isolated from Degussa (Evonik) P25 TiO<sub>2</sub> promote e<sub>hot</sub><sup>-</sup> injection with much higher efficiency than those supported on other commercially-available TiO<sub>2</sub> and catalyze aerobic oxidation with very high quantum yield (7.7% at 550 nm). Photoelectrochemical and spectroscopic analysis revealed that the number of Ti<sup>4+</sup> atoms located at the Au-TiO<sub>2</sub> interface is the crucial factor. These Ti<sup>4+</sup> atoms neutralize the negative charge of the Au particles and create a Schottky barrier with narrower depletion layer. This facilitates efficient e<sub>hot</sub><sup>-</sup> injection by "quantum tunneling" through the Schottky barrier without overbarrier energy. The e<sub>hot</sub><sup>-</sup> injection depends on several factors, and loading of 2 wt% Au particles with 3.5-4 nm diameters at around room temperature exhibits the highest activity of plasmonic photocatalysis.
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