RESUMEN
Hot-hole injection from plasmonic metal nanoparticles to the valence band of p-type semiconductors and reduction by hot electrons should be improved for efficient and tuneable reduction to obtain beneficial chemical compounds. We employed the concept of modal strong coupling between plasmons and a Fabry-Pérot (FP) nanocavity to enhance the hot-hole injection efficiency. We fabricated a photocathode composed of gold nanoparticles (Au-NPs), p-type nickel oxide (NiO), and a platinum film (Pt film) (ANP). The ANP structure absorbs visible light over a broad wavelength range from 500â nm to 850â nm via hybrid modes based on the modal strong coupling between the plasmons of Au-NPs and the FP nanocavity of NiO on a Pt film. All wavelength regions of the hybrid modes of the modal strong coupling system promoted hot-hole injection from the Au-NPs to NiO and proton/water reduction by hot electrons. The incident photon-to-current efficiency based on H2 evolution through water/proton reduction by hot electrons reached 0.2 % at 650â nm and 0.04 % at 800â nm.
RESUMEN
The spatiotemporal origin of plasmonic chiroptical responses in nanostructures remains unexplored and unclear. Here, two orthogonally oriented Au nanorods as a prototype were investigated, with a giant chiroptical response caused by antisymmetric and symmetric mode excitations for obliquely incident left-handed circular polarization (LCP) and right-handed circular polarization (RCP) light. Time-resolved photoemission electron microscopy (PEEM) was employed to measure the near-field spatial distributions, spectra, and spatiotemporal dynamics of plasmonic modes associated with the chiroptical responses at the nanofemto scale, verifying the characteristic near-field distributions at the resonant wavelengths of the two modes and a very large spectral dichroism for LCP and RCP. More importantly, eigenmode excitations and their contributions to the ultrafast plasmonic chiroptical response in the space-time domain were directly revealed, promoting a full understanding of the ultrafast chiral origin in complex nanostructures. These findings open a way to design chiroptical nanophotonic devices for spatiotemporal control of chiral light-matter interactions.
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We experimentally demonstrate and theoretically study the formation of coherent plasmon-exciton states which exhibit absorption of >90% of the incident light (at resonance) and cancellation of absorption. These coherent states result from the interaction between a material supporting an electronic excitation and a plasmonic structure capable of (near) perfect absorption of light. We illustrate the potential implications of these coherent states by measuring the charge separation attainable after photoexcitation. Our study opens the prospect for realizing devices that exploit coherent effects in applications.
RESUMEN
We developed a photoanode consisting of Au-Ag alloy nanoparticles (NPs), a TiO2 thin film and a Au film (AATA) under modal strong coupling conditions with a large splitting energy of 520â meV, which can be categorized into the ultrastrong coupling regime. We fabricated a photoanode under ultrastrong coupling conditions to verify the relationship between the coupling strength and photoelectric conversion efficiency and successfully performed efficient photochemical reactions. The AATA photoanode showed a 4.0 % maximum incident photon-to-current efficiency (IPCE), obtained at 580â nm, and the internal quantum efficiency (IQE) was 4.1 %. These results were attributed to the high hot-electron injection efficiency due to the larger near-field enhancement and relatively negative potential distribution of the hot electrons. Furthermore, hybrid mode-induced water oxidation using AATA structures was performed, with a Faraday efficiency of more than 70 % for O2 evolution.
RESUMEN
Metallic nanoparticles such as silver and gold show localized surface plasmon resonances (LSPRs), which are associated with near-field enhancement effects in the vicinity of nanoparticles. Therefore, strong light-matter interaction is induced by the near-field enhancement effects of LSPRs. Because the resonant wavelength of LSPRs can be easily controlled by the size and shape of the metallic nanoparticles in the visible and near-infrared wavelength range, LSPRs have received considerable attention as optical antennae for light energy conversion systems such as solar cells. LSPRs decay very quickly as a result of light scattering and excitation of electron-hole pairs in the metal itself. However, in addition to the near-field enhancement effect, this light scattering and electron-hole pair excitation, which are known to cause loss of LSPRs, can be utilized as a solar cell enhancement mechanism. Here, we focus on plasmonic solid-state solar cells. The mechanisms of the light scattering by LSPRs, near-field enhancement, and plasmon-induced charge separation based on electron-hole pair excitations can be clarified. We review the related studies from the viewpoint of these mechanisms rather than material science.
RESUMEN
Localized surface plasmon resonances (LSPRs) are gaining considerable attention due to the unique far-field and near-field optical properties and applications. Additionally, the Fermi energy, which is the chemical potential, of plasmonic nanoparticles is one of the key properties to control hot-electron and -hole transfer at the interface between plasmonic nanoparticles and a semiconductor. In this article, we tried to control the diffusion potential of the plasmonic system by manipulating the interface dipole. We fabricated solid-state photoelectric conversion devices in which gold nanoparticles (Au-NPs) are located between strontium titanate (SrTiO3) as an electron transfer material and nickel oxide (NiO) as a hole transport material. Lanthanum aluminate as an interface dipole layer was deposited on the atomic layer scale at the three-phase interface of Au-NPs, SrTiO3, and NiO, and the effect was investigated by photoelectric measurements. Importantly, the diffusion potential between the plasmonic metal and a semiconductor can be arbitrarily controlled by the averaged thickness and direction of the interface dipole layer. The insertion of an only one unit cell (uc) interface dipole layer, whose thickness was less than 0.5 nm, dramatically controlled the diffusion potential formed between the plasmonic nanoparticles and surrounding media. This is a new methodology to control the plasmonic potential without applying external stimuli, such as an applied potential or photoirradiation, and without changing the base materials. In particular, it is very beneficial for plasmonic devices in that the interface dipole has the ability not only to decrease but also to increase the open-circuit voltage on the order of several hundreds of millivolts.
RESUMEN
We investigated the grating effect in complex gold dolmen structures, in which multiple plasmon modes are present due to plasmon hybridization, experimentally from both the far field and the near field. In particular, the near-field properties were investigated using photoemission electron microscopy, and it was demonstrated that two hybridized plasmon modes on the dolmen structures could be influenced by the grating effect. For comparison, we also investigated the grating effect in arrays of simple nanoblocks and heptamer structures, which were supposed to support a strong bright plasmon mode and a strong dark plasmon mode, respectively, in the near field. We found that the spectral responses of the two hybridized modes on the dolmen structures as the pitch size changed evolved in a manner similar to that of the bright dipole mode on the nanoblocks, whereas the dark mode on the heptamer structures is less sensitive to the pitch size.
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Infrared light has received attention for sensor applications, including fingerprint spectroscopy, in the bioengineering and security fields. Surface plasmon physics enables the operation of a light harvesting optical antenna. Gold nanochains exhibit localized surface plasmon resonance (LSPR) in the infrared region with high frequency selectivity. However, a feasible design for optical antennae with a higher resonant efficiency and frequency selectivity as a function of structural design and periodicity is still unknown. In the present study, we investigated the relationship between the resonant efficiency and frequency selectivity as a function of the structural design of gold nanochains and explored structural periodicity for obtaining highly frequency-selective optical antennae. An optical antenna design with higher resonant efficiency is proposed on the basis of its efficient interaction with non-polarized light.
RESUMEN
Visible- and near-infrared-light-driven water splitting, which splits water molecules to generate hydrogen and oxygen gases, is a significant subject in artificial photosynthesis with the goal of achieving a low-carbon society. In recent years, considerable attention has been paid to studies on the development of a plasmon-induced water-splitting system responding to visible light. In this review, we categorized water-splitting systems as gold-nanoparticle-loaded semiconductor photocatalytic particles system and metallic-nanoparticles-loaded semiconductor photoelectrode systems, and introduce the latest studies according to these categories. Especially, we describe the studies that optimize a material or a structural design of metallic-nanoparticle-loaded semiconductor photoelectrodes and consider a whole water-splitting system, including a cathode design. Furthermore, we discuss important points when studying plasmon-induced water splitting, and we describe a methodology that enhances plasmon-induced water-splitting efficiency.
RESUMEN
The generation of ammonia from atmospheric nitrogen and water using sunlight is a preferable approach to obtaining ammonia as an energy carrier and potentially represents a new paradigm for achieving a low-carbon and sustainable-energy society. Herein, we report the selective conversion of dinitrogen into ammonia through plasmon-induced charge separation by using a strontium titanate (SrTiO3) photoelectrode loaded with gold nanoparticles (Au-NPs) and a zirconium/zirconium oxide (Zr/ZrOx ) thin film. We observed the simultaneous stoichiometric production of ammonia and oxygen from nitrogen and water under visible-light irradiation.
RESUMEN
We have successfully developed a plasmon-induced technique for ammonia synthesis that responds to visible light through a strontium titanate (SrTiO3) photoelectrode loaded with gold (Au) nanoparticles. The photoelectrochemical reaction cell was divided into two chambers to separate the oxidized (anodic side) and reduced (cathodic side) products. To promote NH3 formation, a chemical bias was applied by regulating the pHâ value of these compartments, and ethanol was added to the anodic chamber as a sacrificial donor. The quantity of NH3 formed at the ruthenium surface, which was used as a co-catalyst for SrTiO3, increases linearly as a function of time under irradiation with visible light at wavelengths longer than 550â nm. The NH3 formation action spectrum approximately corresponds to the plasmon resonance spectrum. We deduced that plasmon-induced charge separation at the Au/SrTiO3 interface promotes oxidation at the anodic chamber and subsequent nitrogen reduction on the cathodic side.
RESUMEN
A plasmon-induced water splitting system that operates under irradiation by visible light was successfully developed; the system is based on the use of both sides of the same strontium titanate (SrTiO3) single-crystal substrate. The water splitting system contains two solution chambers to separate hydrogen (H2) and oxygen (O2). To promote water splitting, a chemical bias was applied by regulating the pH values of the chambers. The quantity of H2 evolved from the surface of platinum, which was used as a reduction co-catalyst, was twice the quantity of O2 evolved from an Au-nanostructured surface. Thus, the stoichiometric evolution of H2 and O2 was clearly demonstrated. The hydrogen-evolution action spectrum closely corresponds to the plasmon resonance spectrum, indicating that the plasmon-induced charge separation at the Au/SrTiO3 interface promotes water oxidation and the subsequent reduction of a proton on the backside of the SrTiO3 substrate. The chemical bias is significantly reduced by plasmonic effects, which indicates the possibility of constructing an artificial photosynthesis system with low energy consumption.
RESUMEN
Diversity in structures of water endowed by a hydrogen-bonding network plays crucial roles in wide varieties of phenomena in nature. Chiral ordering of water molecules is an intriguing phenomenon from the viewpoint of bimolecular functions. However, experimental reports on chiral ordering have been limited to the water molecules interacting with biomolecules on the molecular scale. It remains unclear whether pure liquid water forms long-range chiral ordering without any interaction with biomolecules. Here, we show that chiral anisotropy can be observed in the macro/mesoscopic network pattern of an unknown water layer formed via spinodal phase separation-like dynamics at the interface between water and ice III with a chiral crystal structure. We named this unknown water homoimmiscible water. Our observations infer that the unknown water is a chiral liquid crystal. This possibility opens new avenues for a wide variety of research fields such as liquid polymorphism, biology, earth and planetary science, and so forth from the perspective of chirality.
RESUMEN
Studies on chiral spectroscopy have recently demonstrated strong enhancement of chiral light-matter interaction in the chiral near-field of Mie resonance in high-refractive-index dielectric nanostructures by studies on chiral spectroscopy. This situation has motivated researchers to demonstrate effective chiral photosynthesis under a chiral near-field beyond circularly polarized light (CPL) as a chiral source. However, the effectivity of the chiral near-field of Mie resonance for chiral photosynthesis has not been clearly demonstrated. One major challenge is the experimental difficulty in evaluating enantiomeric excess of a trace amount of chiral products synthesized in the near-field. Here, by adopting sodium chlorate chiral crystallization as a phenomenon that includes both synthesis and the amplification of chiral products, we show that crystallization on a Mie-resonant silicon metasurface excited by CPL yields a statistically significant large crystal enantiomeric excess of â¼18%, which cannot be achieved merely by CPL. This result provides implications for efficient chiral photosynthesis in a chiral near-field.
RESUMEN
We developed a substrate that enables highly sensitive and spatially uniform surface-enhanced Raman scattering (SERS). This substrate comprises densely packed gold nanoparticles (d-AuNPs)/titanium dioxide/Au film (d-ATA). The d-ATA substrate demonstrates modal ultrastrong coupling between localized surface plasmon resonances (LSPRs) of AuNPs and Fabry-Pérot nanocavities. d-ATA exhibits a significant enhancement of the near-field intensity, resulting in a 78-fold increase in the SERS signal for crystal violet (CV) compared to that of d-AuNP/TiO2 substrates. Importantly, high sensitivity and a spatially uniform signal intensity can be obtained without precise control of the shape and arrangement of the nanoscale AuNPs, enabling quantitative SERS measurements. Additionally, SERS measurements of rhodamine 6G (R6G) on this substrate under ultralow adsorption conditions (0.6 R6G molecules/AuNP) show a spatial variation in the signal intensity within 3%. These findings suggest that the SERS signal under modal ultrastrong coupling originates from multiple plasmonic particles with quantum coherence.
RESUMEN
Depending on the photoirradiation conditions, metal nanostructures exhibit various plasmonic modes, including dipolar, quadrupolar, and hexapolar modes. This work demonstrates numerically that these high-order plasmonic modes can be used to switch nanoscale temperature distributions during the plasmonic heating of a manganese (Mn) nanorod. The key feature of Mn is its low thermal conductivity. Generally, when noble metal nanostructures are used for plasmonic heating, the nanostructure surface will be almost isothermal regardless of the order of the excited plasmonic modes because of the high thermal conductivity of noble metals, e.g., the thermal conductivity of gold is 314 W m-1 K-1. However, unlike noble metals, Mn has a significantly lower thermal conductivity of 7.8 W m-1 K-1. Due to this lower thermal conductivity, the distinct spatial characteristics of the high-order plasmonic modes can be transcribed clearly into nanoscale temperature fields, which are achieved by generating polarization currents by high-order plasmons within the nanorod. These findings strongly suggest that high-order plasmonic modes hold significant potential for the advanced and precise manipulation of heat generation at the nanometer scale in thermoplasmonics.
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Experimentally demonstrating the existence of waters with local structures unlike that of common water is critical for understanding both the origin of the mysterious properties of water and liquid polymorphism in single component liquids. At the interfaces between water and ices Ih, III, and VI grown/melted under pressure, we previously discovered low- and high-density unknown waters, that are immiscible with the surrounding water. Here, we show, by in-situ optical microscopy, that an unknown water appears at the ice V-water interface via spinodal-like dynamics. The dewetting dynamics of the unknown water indicate that its characteristic velocity is ~ 90 m/s. The time evolution of the characteristic length of the spinodal-like undulation suggests that the dynamics may be described by a common model for spinodal decomposition of an immiscible liquid mixture. Spinodal-like dewetting dynamics of the unknown water transiently showed anisotropy, implying the property of a liquid crystal.
RESUMEN
Modal strong coupling between localized surface plasmon resonance and a Fabry-Pérot nanocavity has been studied to improve the quantum efficiency of artificial photosynthesis. In this research, we employed Au nanodisk/titanium dioxide/Au film modal strong coupling structures to investigate the mechanism of quantum efficiency enhancement. We found that the quantum coherence within the structures enhances the apparent quantum efficiency of the hot-electron injection from the Au nanodisks to the titanium dioxide layer. Under near-field mapping using photoemission electron microscopy, the existence of quantum coherence was directly observed. Furthermore, the coherence area was quantitatively evaluated by analyzing the relationship between the splitting energy and the particle number density of the Au nanodisks. This quantum-coherence-enhanced hot-electron injection is supported by our theoretical model. Based on these results, applying quantum coherence to photochemical reaction systems is expected to effectively enhance reaction efficiencies.
RESUMEN
Expression of concern for 'Versatile plasmonic-effects at the interface of inverted perovskite solar cells' by Ahmed Esmail Shalan, et al., Nanoscale, 2017, 9, 1229-1236, https://doi.org/10.1039/C6NR06741G.
RESUMEN
We fabricate a novel photoanode consisting of TiO2/Au nanoparticles (Au-NPs)/Ga2O3/TiN/Au-film (TAGA), efficiently increasing light absorption and electron transfer from Au-NPs to Ga2O3 under modal strong coupling. A TiN thin layer deposited on an Au film enables stable high-temperature deposition of Ga2O3 onto the reflective Au film mirror. Modal strong coupling is observed when the resonance wavelength of the Ga2O3/TiN/Au-film Fabry-Pérot cavity overlaps with the plasmon resonance wavelength of Au-NPs partially inlaid in a thin TiO2 layer. Under strong coupling conditions, the light absorption and photoelectrochemical conversion efficiency in the visible region increased more than in the samples without coupling. In this structure, the TiO2 layer partially inlaying Au-NPs plays a vital role in effectively enhancing the coupling strength. We accomplish water splitting at zero bias potential by taking advantage of the intrinsically negative conduction band potential of Ga2O3.