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1.
Faraday Discuss ; 214(0): 341-351, 2019 05 23.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30843543

RESUMO

Plasmonic nanostructure/semiconductor composites are receiving great interest as powerful photocatalytic platforms able to increase solar energy conversion efficiency compared to more traditional approaches. The possibility to grow a thin titania shell onto the gold nanoparticle, thus substantially increasing the metal-semiconductor area of contact, is expected to be ideal for photocatalytic water reduction, especially if the titania (TiO2) coating displays limited thickness and high crystallinity. We argue however that the morphology of the underlying gold nanoparticle and the quality of the interface are the main drivers of photocatalytic performance. Herein, we show how we can synthesize TiO2-coated gold nanostar- and gold nanorod-based photocatalysts and identify the most important design parameters that one should be focusing on for the optimization of hot electron-based photocatalysts. In addition to nanoparticle morphology and interface quality, we determine that the integrated absorptivity of the plasmon band and the uniformity and crystallinity of the semiconductor shell are important, even though to a lesser extent. These results may prove interesting not only to increase production rates in hydrogen evolution reactions or other chemical conversions, but also to decouple and understand additional mechanisms driving photocatalysis, other than the sequential, hot electron mediated one, as we reported before.

2.
Angew Chem Int Ed Engl ; 48(26): 4813-5, 2009.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19452505

RESUMO

Carbonylation gets a phase lift: The usual liquid-phase, high-pressure processes for carbonylating formaldehydes are avoided in a novel vapor-phase reaction. Using an acid zeolite (Faujasite) at near-atmospheric pressure dimethoxymethane (DMM; the dimethyl acetal of formaldehyde; see scheme) is carbonylated to produce methyl methoxyacetate (MMAc). This approach provides a new route to ethylene glycol under mild conditions.

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