15 research outputs found
Band-structure tunability via the modulation of excitons in semiconductor nanostructures: manifestation in photocatalytic fuel generation
Understanding the energetics of electron transfer at the semiconductor interface is crucial for the development of solar harvesting technologies, including photovoltaics, photocatalysis, and solar fuel systems. However, modern artificial photosynthetic materials are not efficient and limited by their fast charge recombination with high binding energy of excitons. Hence, reducing the exciton binding energy can increase the generation of charge carriers, which improve the photocatalytic activities. Extensive research has been dedicated to improving the exciton dissociation efficiency through rational semiconductor design via heteroatom doping, vacancy engineering, the construction of heterostructures, and donor-pi-acceptor (D-pi-A) interfaces to extend the charge carrier migration, promoting the dissociation of excitons. Consequently, functionalized photocatalysts have demonstrated remarkable photocatalytic performances for solar fuel production under visible light irradiation. This review provides the fundamental aspects of excitons in semiconductor nanostructures, having a high binding energy and ultrafast exciton formation together with promising photo-redox properties for solar to fuel conversion application. In particular, this review highlights the significant role of the excitonic effect in the photocatalytic activity of newly developed functional materials and the underlying mechanistic insight for tuning the performance of nanostructured semiconductor photocatalysts for water splitting, CO2 reduction, and N-2 fixation reactions
In Situ Encapsulation and Release Kinetics of pH and Temperature Responsive Nanogels
A facile synthesis of pH and temperature responsive poly(<i>N</i>-isopropylacrylamide) (PNIPAM) nanogels is presented. The scanning electron microscope (SEM) and dynamic light scattering (DLS) measurements indicate the formation of nanospheres of the order of 150 ± 20 and 230 ± 30 nm in case of PNIPAM (referred to as NG) and acid functionalized PNIPAM nanogels (referred to as AFNG), respectively, whereas on drug loading, the size increased to 170 ± 20 and 270 ± 20 nm, respectively at pH 7.4. Both the AFNG and amphotericin B (AmB) drug loaded AFNG (AmB-AFNG) show swelling as the pH changed from 3 to 11, but NG does not show any swelling with the change in pH. The AmB-AFNG exhibits better drug release up to ∼94% at pH 11. The better drug release observed in the case of AmB-AFNG is due to (a) swollen hydrated state of nanogel and (b) the acting repulsive forces between acid group of AFNG and AmB drug
Mechanistic Insight into the Defect-Engineered White Light Emission from the Single-Phase Orthovanadate Phosphor Synthesized by a Facile Rapid Microwave-Assisted Synthesis
The
synthesis of single-phase barium orthovanadate phosphors by
a one-pot microwave-assisted hydrothermal approach has been reported,
wherein the homogeneous thermal zone generated at the molecular level
by microwave radiation gives rise to tunable distortion in the tetrahedral
VO4–3 and oxygen vacancies, eventually
enabling intrinsic white light emission with CIE of 0.31,0.38, high
photoluminescence internal quantum efficiency of 35%, and external
quantum efficiency of 28% whereas phosphor synthesized by the hydrothermal
route exhibits only bluish-green emission (PLQE: 0.5%). The Rietveld
refinement confirms the formation of a single trigonal phase having
dissimilar V–O bond lengths and bond angles, implying the formation
of a distorted phosphor under optimized conditions, and corroborates
with Raman and Fourier transform infrared analyses. The X-ray photoelectron
spectroscopy and electron paramagnetic resonance analysis reveal that
the origin of white light emission is due to short- and long-range
defects, in particular the oxygen vacancies, which eventually form
an intermediate energy level in the forbidden region between the valence
and conduction bands. Lifetime spectra show triexponential fitting,
corresponding to two charge transfer blue and green emission bands
(3T2, 3T1 to 1A1) and one oxygen vacancy-related red emission at RT.
Furthermore, these phosphors are thermally stable, as no change in
the structure or emission characteristics are observed. A prototype
fabricated using a 365 nm chip exhibits white-light-emission CIE of
0.353,0.392, correlated color temperature of 4867 K, color rendering
index of 85, and high luminous efficacy of 102 lm/W at 140 mA operating
current, portentous for practical applications
Enhanced Photocatalytic Activity and Charge Carrier Dynamics of Hetero-Structured Organic–Inorganic Nano-Photocatalysts
P3HT-coupled CdS heterostructured
nanophotocatalysts have been synthesized by an inexpensive and scalable
chemical bath deposition approach followed by drop casting. The presence
of amorphous regions corresponding to P3HT in addition to the lattice
fringes [(002) and (101)] corresponding to hexagonal CdS in the HRTEM
image confirm the coupling of P3HT onto CdS. The shift of π*
(CC) and σ* (C–C) peaks toward lower energy losses
and prominent presence of σ* (C–H) in the case of P3HT–CdS
observed in electron energy loss spectrum implies the formation of
heterostructured P3HT–CdS. It was further corroborated by the
shifting of S 2p peaks toward higher binding energy (163.8 and 164.8
eV) in the XPS spectrum of P3HT–CdS. The current density recorded
under illumination for the 0.2 wt % P3HT–CdS photoelectrode
is 3 times higher than that of unmodified CdS and other loading concentration
of P3HT coupled CdS photoelectrodes. The solar hydrogen generation
studies show drastic enhancement in the hydrogen generation rate i.e.
4108 μmol h<sup>–1 </sup>g<sup>–1</sup> in
the case of 0.2 wt % P3HT–CdS. The improvement in the photocatalytic
activity of 0.2 wt % P3HT–CdS photocatalyst is ascribed to
improved charge separation lead by the unison of shorter lifetime
(τ<sub>1</sub> = 0.25 ns) of excitons, higher degree of band
bending, and increased donor density as revealed by transient photoluminescence
studies and Mott–Schottky analysis
Ceria Supported Pt/PtO-Nanostructures: Efficient Photocatalyst for Sacrificial Donor Assisted Hydrogen Generation under Visible-NIR Light Irradiation
In
photocatalysis, imperative photoredox behavior and narrow band
gap are important properties to exploit solar light for water splitting
reaction. Nanostructured ceria (cerium dioxide/CeO<sub>2</sub>) with
Ce<sup>3+</sup>/Ce<sup>4+</sup> (photoredox couple) shows significant
enhancement in photocatalytic activity, however, no significant activity
for water splitting reaction. The present study mainly focuses on
incorporation of Pt on nanostructured mesoporous ceria by wet-impregnation
method and its evaluation for donor assisted photocatalytic water
splitting reaction. The BET analysis shows much higher surface area
(119–131 m<sup>2</sup> g<sup>–1</sup>) for unmodified
as well as Pt modified mesoceria samples as compared to commercial
ceria (24.4 m<sup>2</sup> g<sup>–1</sup>), although structure
was not ordered. The incorporation of Pt on mesoceria shows remarkable
influence on photocatalytic hydrogen generation activity, and 1 wt
% Pt was found to be optimized content, with broader light absorption.
This photocatalyst was optimized with respect to photocatalyst dose,
use of different sacrificial donors and their concentrations as well
as other experimental parameters, with 34 h time course evaluation,
yielding cumulative 1.52 mmol of hydrogen, under visible-NIR light
irradiation and using ethanol as a sacrificial donor. The XPS, BET
and photoluminescence studies imply that the enhanced photocatalytic
hydrogen evolution in the case of mesoceria is due to the unison of
high surface area, reduced recombination of photogenerated charge
carrier and lower Ce<sup>3+</sup> concentration in the case of mesoceria
How Light-Harvesting Semiconductors Can Alter the Bias of Reversible Electrocatalysts in Favor of H<sub>2</sub> Production and CO<sub>2</sub> Reduction
The most efficient catalysts for
solar fuel production should operate
close to reversible potentials, yet possess a bias for the fuel-forming
direction. Protein film electrochemical studies of Ni-containing carbon
monoxide dehydrogenase and [NiFeSe]-hydrogenase, each a reversible
electrocatalyst, show that the electronic state of the electrode strongly
biases the direction of electrocatalysis of CO<sub>2</sub>/CO and
H<sup>+</sup>/H<sub>2</sub> interconversions. Attached to graphite
electrodes, these enzymes show high activities for both oxidation
and reduction, but there is a marked shift in bias, in favor of CO<sub>2</sub> or H<sup>+</sup> reduction, when the respective enzymes are
attached instead to n-type semiconductor electrodes constructed from
CdS and TiO<sub>2</sub> nanoparticles. This catalytic rectification
effect can arise for a reversible electrocatalyst attached to a semiconductor
electrode if the electrode transforms between semiconductor- and metallic-like
behavior across the same narrow potential range (<0.25 V) that
the electrocatalytic current switches between oxidation and reduction