Publication | Open Access
Experimental practices required to isolate thermal effects in plasmonic photo-catalysis: lessons from recent experiments
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Citations
28
References
2019
Year
EngineeringMetal NanoparticlesMetallic NanomaterialsChemistryNanoscale ChemistryOptical PropertiesChemical ReactionsPhotocatalysisPlasmonic Photo-catalysisMaterials SciencePhotochemistryNanotechnologyCatalysisExperimental PracticesNanophysicsPlasmonicsPlasmonic CatalysisNanomaterialsApplied PhysicsPlasmonic PhotocatalysisThermal Effects
Metal nanoparticles have recently been shown experimentally to speed up chemical reactions when subject to illumination. The mechanisms of this phenomenon have been under debate. A dominant role for high energy non-thermal (typically but imprecisely referred to as “hot”) electrons was proposed in a study by the Halas group [ Science 362 , 69 ( 2018 ) 10.1126/science.aat6967 ]. However, evidence that the faster chemistry has a purely thermal origin has been accumulating, alongside the identification of methodological and technical flaws in the theory and experiments claiming the dominance of “hot” electrons [ Science 364 , eaaw9367 ( 2019 ) 10.1126/science.aaw9367 ]. Here, we advance this discussion towards the possibility of isolating thermal from non-thermal effects. We detail a series of experimental aspects that must be accounted for before effects of “hot” electrons can be distinguished from thermal contributions in plasmonic photocatalysis.
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