| Literature DB >> 29527438 |
Kah Hon Leong1, Azrina Abd Aziz2, Lan Ching Sim1, Pichiah Saravanan3, Min Jang4, Detlef Bahnemann5.
Abstract
The utilisation of sunlight as an abundant and renewable resource has motivated the development of sustainable photocatalysts that can collectively harvest visible light. However, the bottleneck in utilising the low energy photons has led to the discovery of plasmonic photocatalysts. The presence of noble metal on the plasmonic photocatalyst enables the harvesting of visible light through the unique characteristic features of the noble metal nanomaterials. Moreover, the formation of interfaces between noble metal particles and semiconductor materials further results in the formation of a Schottky junction. Thereby, the plasmonic characteristics have opened up a new direction in promoting an alternative path that can be of value to the society through sustainable development derived through energy available for all for diverse applications. We have comprehensively prepared this review to specifically focus on fundamental insights into plasmonic photocatalysts, various synthesis routes, together with their strengths and weaknesses, and the interaction of the plasmonic photocatalyst with pollutants as well as the role of active radical generation and identification. The review ends with a pinnacle insight into future perspectives regarding realistic applications of plasmonic photocatalysts.Entities:
Keywords: Schottky junctions; localized surface plasmon resonance (LSPR); noble metal; plasmonic photocatalyst; reactive radicals; visible light
Year: 2018 PMID: 29527438 PMCID: PMC5827636 DOI: 10.3762/bjnano.9.59
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Beilstein J Nanotechnol ISSN: 2190-4286 Impact factor: 3.649
Figure 1Distinctive features of plasmonics contributing to improved photocatalyst performance.
Figure 2(a) Representation of localized surface plasmon resonance (LSPR) evolution in a noble metal particle irradiated by a light source. Reprinted with permission from [15], copyright 2003 American Chemical Society. (b) LSPR decay processes. Reprinted with permission from [16], copyright 2014 Nature Publishing Group.
Figure 3The metallic equivalent resonant wavelength for 10 nm diameter nanoparticles. Reprinted with permission from [27], copyright 2011 IOP Publishing.
Figure 4Pictorial representation of the localized surface plasmon resonance principle. Reprinted with permission from [31], copyright 2016 Springer.
Figure 5Schematic of the Schottky junction mechanism. Reprinted with permission from [35], copyright 2014 Royal Society of Chemistry.
Summary of various synthesis routes for preparation of plasmonic photocatalysts.
| Plasmonic photocatalyst | Preparation method | Light source | Photocatalysis performance | Ref. |
| Ag-TiO2 | UV photodeposition | visible light (457 nm) and sunlight | enhanced H2 production of 90 µmol (artificial visible light) and 105 µmol (sunlight) as compared to TiO2 (70 µmol, artificial visible light and 80 µmol, sunlight) | [ |
| Ag-TiO2 | wet chemical | sunlight | increase in Ag NP loading increased the photocatalysis efficiency: 97% degradation for 10 μM MB in 60 min and 93% for 5 μΜ MO in 40 min | [ |
| Ag-TiO2 | ultrasound | visible light (400–700 nm) | 20 wt % Ag-TiO2 showed acetone degradation rate of 0.57 mg m−3 min−1 as compared to almost 0 mg m−3 min−1 for TiO2 | [ |
| Ag-TiO2 | sol–gel process | visible light | complete removal of indigo carmine (2.5 × 10−5 M) was achieved in 3 h | [ |
| Ag-TiO2 | hydrothermal | visible light | complete removal of rhodamine B (2 mg/L) in 180 min by Ag-TiO2 arrays; 55% for TiO2 | [ |
| Ag-TiO2 | electrochemical deposition | visible light | photocatalysis of Ag-TiO2 achieved about 80% removal of methyl blue (2 × 10−5 M) in 2.5 h against TiO2 | [ |
| Ag-TiO2 | electrodeposition | visible light (400–700 nm) | complete decomposition of methyl blue with Ag/TiO2 core–shell nanowires within 40 min and 10 min for UV and visible light, respectively | [ |
| Ag-TiO2 | sulfydryl-assisted | visible light (>400 nm) | almost complete degradation (98%) of methyl orange was achieved by Ag/TiO2 as compare to TiO2 (30%) | [ |
| Ag-TiO2 | photodeposition | visible light | TiO2 with 2% Ag obtained improved photodegradation of rhodamine B (10−5 M) with ≈30% improvement under visible light irradiation | [ |
| Ag-TiO2 | photoreduction by artificial UV light | visible light | complete degradation of rhodamine B was achieved for TiO2 with 1 wt % Ag with initial dye concentration of 10 mg L−1 in 30 min | [ |
| Ag-C3N4 | reflux treatment | visible light (>420 nm) | enhanced photocurrent intensity (a factor of 4), photodegradation of methylene blue (by 1.8 times) and hydrogen production (by 30 times) as compared with C3N4 | [ |
| Ag-TiO2 | photoreduction by direct sunlight | visible light | 0.3 wt % Ag/TiO2 showed clear photodegradation of amoxicillin and 2,4-dichlorophenol in contrast to TiO2 | [ |
| Ag-TiO2 | photochemical reduction under Xe lamp | visible light | incorporation of Ag onto TiO2 resulted in significant photodegradation of rhodamine B as compared to TiO2 (by a factor of more than 2) | [ |
| Au-TiO2 | impregnation | visible light | complete decolourization of methylene blue (1.0 × 10−5 M) in a short duration (10 min); complete degradation was reported for rhodamine B (2 min) and ≈25% degradation of 4-chlorophenol in 180 min | [ |
| Au-TiO2 | impregnation | visible light | significant enhancement was achieved with complete conversion of formaldehyde of 83.3% under visible light at 44% relative humidity | [ |
| Au-TiO2 | sol–gel | UV light | Au deposition over TiO2 enhanced the conversion of CO2 to CO with a rate of 4144 µmol g−1 h−1 which is 345-fold higher than pure TiO2 | [ |
| Au-TiO2 | deposition–precipitation | visible light | the presence of Au enhanced the photocatalytic activity of both methylene orange removal and hydrogen production | [ |
| Au-TiO2 | deposition–precipitation | visible light | improved charge separation and transfer resulted to an enhanced H2 evolution rate | [ |
| Au-TiO2 | deposition–precipitation | sunlight | highest degradation efficiency of 97% in 50 min was reported for Safranin O dye after the incorporation of Au nanoparticles | [ |
| Au-TiO2 | deposition–precipitation | simulated solar light | H2 production increased up to 5–6 mmol (g−1h−1) under simulated solar irradiation and further increased with increased Au concentration | [ |
| Au-TiO2 | deposition–precipitation | sunlight | mesoporous Au/TiO2 with 4 wt % Au resulted in 99% removal of alizarin as compared to P25 (65%) in 80 min | [ |
| Au-TiO2 | chemical precipitation method | visible light | the surface deposition approach significantly improved the photoactivity by 5–10-fold for the studied micropollutant | [ |
| Au-TiO2 | microwave–chemical reduction | visible light | H2 production rate for Au/TiO2 reached 4.3 µmol cm−2 h−1 as compared to 0.47 µmol cm−2 h−1 for TiO2 | [ |
| Pd-TiO2 | impregnation | UV and visible light | Pd activates SPR which escalates hydrogen production (by a factor of 4); the reaction requires the presence of both UV and visible light to achieve 800 µmol/g | [ |
| Pd-TiO2 | sol–gel | UV light (8 W UV lamp) | Pd-doped TiO2 enhanced the degradation of NO | [ |
| Pd-TiO2 | hydrothermal | visible light | optimal photocatalytic performance of p-nitrophenol reduction was achieved by loading 1.0 mol % Pd onto titania nanotubes; a rate constant of 0.7072 min−1 was reported for the photocatalytic oxidation | [ |
| Pd-TiO2 | glucose reduction | UV light (150 W Hg lamp) | Pd NPs on the TiO2 surface substantially increase the electron movement and act as vital sites for adsorption to promote CO2 hydrogenation; as a result, 1.0 wt % Pd loading yielded 355.62, 46.35, and 39.69 µmol/g for CH4, CO and C2H6, respectively | [ |
| Pd-TiO2 | reduction | UV light (100 W UV lamp) | photocatalytic activity of TiO2 impregnated with 1 wt % Pd performed well compared to TiO2; almost 90% conversion of n-hexane, n-octane, cyclohexane and isooctane achieved within 27, 28, 34 and 36 s, respectively | [ |
| Pd-TiO2 | chemical reduction | solar stimulator (50 mW cm−2, 300 W Xe lamp) | immense improvement in photocatalytic activity with enhanced H2 production as compared to TiO2; TiO2 decorated with 0.18 wt % Pd NPs showed an H2 production rate of 3096 µmol g−1h−1 | [ |
| Pd-TiO2 | chemical photodeposition | solar simulator | higher decolourization (32%) for rhodamine B | [ |
| Pd-TiO2 | solar deposition | sunlight | complete degradation (97.5%) of amoxicillin was obtained within 5 h by optimum loading of 0.5 wt % Pd onto the surface of TiO2 | [ |
| Pt-loaded g-C3N4 | polyol | 15 W energy saving daylight | 2 wt % Pt on g-C3N4 showed highest CH4 yield of 13.02 µmol g−1 as compared to unloaded g-C3N4 (2.55 µmol g−1 ) after 10 h of irradiation | [ |
| Pt-TiO2 | sol–gel | 18 W daylight lamp | better formaldehyde degradation (98.3%) as compared to TiO2 (75.2%) | [ |
| Pt-TiO2 | impregnation–reduction | visible light | improved catalytic performance of aniline oxidation was achieved for 2 wt % Pt particles with 12 h of photoreaction | [ |
| Pt-TiO2 | impregnation–reduction | UV light (350 W high-pressure Hg) | optimal Pt loading of 1.2 wt % exhibited increased (125-fold) H2 production rate compared to unmodified TiO2 microspheres | [ |
| Pt-TiO2 | chemical deposition | visible light | rate constant of Pt-TiO2 for 10 mg/L nitrobenzene degradation was 2× larger than with TiO2 | [ |
| Pt-TiO2 | UV-assisted photodeposition | visible light (>420 nm) | 3 mM H2PtCl6 yielded highest photodegradation (84.27%) for methyl orange | [ |
| AgCl-CN | deposition–precipitation | 15 W energy saving daylight | 2.5-fold increase in methane yield of was achieved for the AgCl-CN compared to CN | [ |
Figure 6Synthesis of Pd/TiO2 photocatalyst via sunlight-assisted photodeposition [50].
Figure 7Schematic of Au/AgBr-Ag heterostructure mechanism for improved photocatalytic performance. (a) Semiconductor-excited (AgBr) electron transfer to metal (Au or Ag) NPs. (b) Plasmon-excited electron (Au or Ag) transfer to semiconductor (AgBr) NPs (e− = electron, h+ = hole, Ef = Fermi energy, M = Au or Ag). (c) General reaction involved in mechanism of Au/AgBr-Ag heterostructure. Reprinted with permission from [103], copyright 2017 Royal Society of Chemistry.
Figure 8Photodegradation of GO in the presence of an electron donor (Ag NPs). Reprinted with permission from [95], copyright 2011 Royal Society of Chemistry.
Figure 9(a) Pure metal nanoparticles (NPs) without any semiconductor. (b) Metal NPs partially embedded into the semiconductor and partially exposed to the environment. (c) Metal NPs having a direct electrical contact by being fully embedded within the semiconductor without being exposed to the environment. (d) Metal NPs isolated from the semiconductor by a non-conducting layer to prevent direct electric contact. Reprinted with permission from [6], copyright 2013 IOP Publishing.
Figure 10High-resolution X-ray absorption spectroscopy (HR-XAS) experiment used to determine the changes in the Au LIII-edge induced by 100 mW continuous wave laser excitation of the localized surface plasmon at 532 nm. Reprinted with permission from [105], copyright 2013 Royal Society of Chemistry.
Figure 11Generation of reactive oxygen species (ROSs) in the photocatalytic reduction and oxidation of O2 and H2O. Reprinted with permission from [115], copyright 2017 American Chemical Society.
Figure 12Plausible structural formation of adsorbed H2O2 on TiO2 surface (a) end-on (b) bridged and (c) side-on. Reprinted with permission from [115], copyright 2017 American Chemical Society.
Figure 13Reactions involved in the detection method of H2O2 with fluorescence probes (a) p-hydroxyphenylacetic acid (HPA) and (b) dihydrorhodamine 123. Reprinted with permission from [115], copyright 2017 American Chemical Society.
Figure 14(a) Reaction of HTMP to TEMPOL. Reprinted with permission from [115], copyright 2017 American Chemical Society. (b) Fluorescence detection of 1O2 with TDI. Reprinted with permission from [125], copyright 2007 Springer Science + Business Media.
Figure 15(a) Laser-induced fluorescence detection of •OH released from an irradiated TiO2 surface. Reprinted with permission from [128], copyright 2007 American Chemical Society. (b) Obtained excitation spectrum of •OH radicals. Reprinted with permission from [115], copyright 2017 American Chemical Society.
Figure 16Reaction routes for detection of •OH radicals with a DMPO spin-trapping reagent. Reactions with •OH radicals (a) in solution, (b) at the surface, and (c) indirect reaction via oxidation of DMPO. Reprinted with permission from [115], copyright 2017 American Chemical Society.
Figure 17(a) Usage of fluorescence probe HPF to detect •OH radicals. (b) Experimental setup for the single-molecule detection of photogenerated •OH in H2O. Reprinted with permission from [131], copyright 2014 Wiley-VCH Verlag GmbH & Co.
Figure 18(a) Reactions involved in the detection of •O2− with DMPO. (b) Chemical structures of the spin-trapping reagents for •O2−, BMPO, DEPMPO and CYPMPO. Reprinted with permission from [115], copyright 2017 American Chemical Society.
Figure 19(a) FDTD simulation set up for Cu7S4. (b–d) 2D contour map of the electric field intensities around the Cu7S4 nanocrystal under illumination at 808 nm (b), 980 nm (c) and 1500 nm (d), respectively. Reprinted with permission from [111], copyright 2015 American Chemical Society.