Photocatalytic Activity
Enhanced by Plasmonic Resonant
Energy Transfer from Metal to Semiconductor
- Publication date
- Publisher
Abstract
Plasmonic metal nanostructures have been incorporated
into semiconductors
to enhance the solar-light harvesting and the energy-conversion efficiency.
So far the mechanism of energy transfer from the plasmonic metal to
semiconductors remains unclear. Herein the underlying plasmonic energy-transfer
mechanism is unambiguously determined in Au@SiO<sub>2</sub>@Cu<sub>2</sub>O sandwich nanostructures by transient-absorption and photocatalysis
action spectrum measurement. The gold core converts the energy of
incident photons into localized surface plasmon resonance oscillations
and transfers the plasmonic energy to the Cu<sub>2</sub>O semiconductor
shell via resonant energy transfer (RET). RET generates electron–hole
pairs in the semiconductor by the dipole–dipole interaction
between the plasmonic metal (donor) and semiconductor (acceptor),
which greatly enhances the visible-light photocatalytic activity as
compared to the semiconductor alone. RET from a plasmonic metal to
a semiconductor is a viable and efficient mechanism that can be used
to guide the design of photocatalysts, photovoltaics, and other optoelectronic
devices