Issue 4, 2017

Hot electron-driven hydrogen evolution using anisotropic gold nanostructure assembled monolayer MoS2

Abstract

Plasmonic nanostructures attracting particular interest in plasmon-induced highly energetic electrons, also known as hot electrons, play a fundamental role in photocatalysis for solar energy conversion. Plasmon-induced hot electron excitation, relaxation, transport, and injection to two-dimensional semiconductors are necessary to clearly understand the efficient plasmon-induced chemical reaction. Herein, we use a plasmonic photocatalyst composed of anisotropic gold nanostructures as the electron donor assembled on two-dimensional molybdenum dichalcogenide, monolayer MoS2, as the electron acceptor in order to unveil the plasmon-induced interfacial hot electron transfer for the hydrogen evolution reaction (HER). Single-particle confocal fluorescence microscopy, computational calculation of finite-difference-time-domain (FDTD) simulation, and time-resolved transient absorption measurements revealed that anisotropic gold nanostructures with strong plasmon resonance exhibit interfacial hot electron transfer to monolayer MoS2, giving the charge separated state with a long lifetime of 800 ps which is responsible for efficient HER. This is the first example to show the plasmon-induced interfacial hot electron transfer from anisotropic Au nanostructures to two-dimensional materials.

Graphical abstract: Hot electron-driven hydrogen evolution using anisotropic gold nanostructure assembled monolayer MoS2

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
01 Oct 2016
Accepted
15 Dec 2016
First published
19 Dec 2016

Nanoscale, 2017,9, 1520-1526

Hot electron-driven hydrogen evolution using anisotropic gold nanostructure assembled monolayer MoS2

P. Zhang, M. Fujitsuka and T. Majima, Nanoscale, 2017, 9, 1520 DOI: 10.1039/C6NR07740D

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