1 research outputs found
Plasmonic Monitoring of Catalytic Hydrogen Generation by a Single Nanoparticle Probe
Plasmonic nanostructures such as gold nanoparticles are
very useful
for monitoring chemical reactions because their optical properties
are highly dependent upon the environment surrounding the particle
surface. Here, we designed the catalytic structure composed of platinized
cadmium sulfide with gold domains as a sensitive probe, and we monitored
the photocatalytic decomposition of lactic acid to generate hydrogen
gas in situ by single-particle dark-field spectroscopy. The plasmon
band shift of the gold probe throughout the reaction exhibits significant
particle-to-particle variation, and by simulating the reaction kinetics,
the rate constant and structural information (including the diffusion
coefficient through the shell and the relative arrangement of the
active sites) can be estimated for individual catalyst particles.
This approach is versatile for the monitoring of various heterogeneous
reactions with distinct components at a single-particle level