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Plasmonic Hot-Carrier-Mediated Tunable Photochemical Reactions
Author(s) -
Yu Zhang,
Tammie Nelson,
Sergei Tretiak,
Hua Guo,
George C. Schatz
Publication year - 2018
Publication title -
acs nano
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 5.554
H-Index - 382
eISSN - 1936-086X
pISSN - 1936-0851
DOI - 10.1021/acsnano.8b03830
Subject(s) - antibonding molecular orbital , plasmon , photoexcitation , dissociation (chemistry) , chemical physics , materials science , photochemistry , molecule , nanoparticle , plasmonic nanoparticles , charge carrier , molecular physics , chemistry , nanotechnology , atomic physics , optoelectronics , excited state , physics , electron , organic chemistry , quantum mechanics , atomic orbital
Hot-carrier generation from surface plasmon decay has found applications in many branches of physics, chemistry, materials science, and energy science. Recent reports demonstrated that the hot carriers generated from plasmon decay in nanoparticles can transfer to attached molecules and drive photochemistry which was thought impossible previously. In this work, we have computationally explored the atomic-scale mechanism of a plasmonic hot-carrier-mediated chemical process, H 2 dissociation. Numerical simulations demonstrate that, after photoexcitation, hot carriers transfer to the antibonding state of the H 2 molecule from the nanoparticle, resulting in a repulsive-potential-energy surface and H 2 dissociation. This process occurs when the molecule is close to a single nanoparticle. However, if the molecule is located at the center of the gap in a plasmonic dimer, dissociation is suppressed due to sequential charge transfer, which efficiently reduces occupation in the antibonding state and, in turn, reduces dissociation. An asymmetric displacement of the molecule in the gap breaks the symmetry and restores dissociation when the additional charge transfer is significantly suppressed. Thus, these models demonstrate the possibility of structurally tunable photochemistry via plasmonic hot carriers.

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