Janus, the two-faced god of Roman mythology, has lent his name to
two-sphere particles that can be used to boost hydrogen production.
Inexpensive hybrid metal and oxide nanostructures prove to be a catalyst
that enhance sunlight-powered hydrogen production
Hydrogen is crucial for the
oil-refining industry and the production of essential chemicals such as the
ammonia used in fertilizers. Since producing hydrogen is costly, scientists
have long searched for alternative, energy-efficient methods to separate
hydrogen atoms from abundant sources such as water.
Nanometer-scale structures
consisting of cheap metal and oxide spheres were recently demonstrated as an
excellent catalyst for a hydrogen-production reaction powered only by sunlight.
The study was completed by Ming-Yong Han and his colleagues of the A*STAR
Institute of Materials Research and Engineering, Singapore, working in
collaboration with a team of researchers from Singapore and France1.
Han and his team mixed
50-nanometer diameter spheres of gold into a titanium dioxide precursor such
that a sphere of titanium dioxide formed on the side of each gold nanoparticle.
Structures with this two-sphere arrangement are known as Janus particles, named
after the two-headed god from Roman mythology. While the Janus particles were
suspended in a mixture of water and isopropyl alcohol, Han and co-workers shone
visible light on them and measured hydrogen production, which proceeded at a
rate as fast as 2 milliliters per minute.
The researchers then used
theoretical models to show that this production rate was caused by so-called
plasmonics effects: that is, the electrons on the surface of the gold
nanoparticle at the junction with the titanium dioxide coupled to the incoming
light and formed light–matter hybrid particles called plasmon polaritons. The
energy absorbed by these particles then passed into the surrounding liquid, and
this drove the hydrogen-releasing chemical reaction.
“Our work provides insight into
mechanisms that will be useful for the future development of high-performance
photocatalysts,” says Han. Indeed, Han and his co-workers were able to improve
the efficiency of the hydrogen production even further: they increased the area
of the metal–oxide interface by using larger gold nanoparticles.
The Janus particles were 100
times more efficient as a catalyst for hydrogen production than bare gold
nanoparticles. Moreover, they were over one-and-a-half times better than
another common type of plasmonic nanoparticle, core–shell particles, in which
the oxide material forms a coating around the metal nanoparticle.
“We next hope to develop a better
understanding of the processes that occur at the metal–titanium-dioxide
interface using a combination of experimental observations and theoretical
simulations,” says Han. “This will get us closer to our ultimate goal of using
solar illumination as an abundant source of renewable energy.”
The A*STAR-affiliated researchers
contributing to this research are from the Institute of Materials Research and
Engineering
References
- Seh, Z. W., Liu, S., Low, M., Zhang, S.-Y., Liu,
Z., et al. Janus Au-TiO2 photocatalysts
with strong localization of plasmonic near-fields for efficient
visible-light hydrogen generation. Advanced Materials 24, 2310–2314
(2012). | article
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