TY - JOUR
T1 - From Optical to Chemical Hot Spots in Plasmonics
AU - Gargiulo, Julian
AU - Berté, Rodrigo
AU - Li, Yi
AU - Maier, Stefan A.
AU - Cortés, Emiliano
N1 - Funding Information:
The authors acknowledge the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (Clusters of Excellence: NanoInitiative Munich and e-Conversion, EXC 2089/1 - 390776260), the Bavarian Solar Energies Go Hybrid (SolTech) program and the Center for NanoScience (CeNS). J.G. acknowledges the European Commission for a Marie-Sklodowska-Curie action, Y.L. acknowledges the European Union’s Framework Programme for Research and Innovation Horizon 2020 (2014–2020) under the Marie Skłodowska-Curie Grant Agreement No. 754388 and the framework of the German Excellence Initiative (No. ZUK22). S.A.M. also acknowledges the Lee-Lucas Chair in Physics and the EPSRC Reactive Plasmonics Programme (EP/M013812/1). E.C. acknowledges the European Commission for the ERC starting Grant 802989 CATALIGHT.
Publisher Copyright:
Copyright © 2019 American Chemical Society.
PY - 2019/5/1
Y1 - 2019/5/1
N2 - ConspectusIn recent years, the possibility to induce chemical transformations by using tunable plasmonic modes has opened the question of whether we can control or create chemical hot spots in these systems. This can be rationalized as the reactive analogue of the well-established concept of optical hot spots, which have drawn a great deal of attention to plasmonic nanostructures for their ability to circumvent the far-field diffraction limit of conventional optical elements.Although optical hot spots can be mainly defined by the geometry and permittivity of the nanostructures, the degrees of freedom influencing their photocatalytic properties appear to be much more numerous. In fact, the reactivity of plasmonic systems are deeply influenced by the dynamics and interplay of photons, plasmon-polaritons, carriers, phonons, and molecular states. These degrees of freedom can affect the reaction rates, the product selectivity, or the spatial localization of a chemical reaction. In this Account, we discuss the oportunities to control chemical hot spots by tuning the cascade of events that follows the excitation and decay of plasmonic modes in nanostructures.We discuss a series of techniques to spatially map and image plasmonic nanoscale reactivity at the single photocatalyst level. We show how to optimize the reactivity of carriers by manipulating their excitation and decay mechanisms in plasmonic nanoparticles. In addition, the tailored generation of non-thermal phonons in metallic nanostructures and their dissipation is shown as a promise to understand and exploit thermal photocatalysis at the nanoscale. Understanding and controlling these processes is essential for the rational design of solar nanometric photocatalysts.Nevertheless, the ultimate capability of a plasmonic photocatalyst to trigger a chemical reaction is correlated to its ability to navigate through, or even modify, the potential energy surface of a given chemical reaction. Here we reunite both worlds, the plasmonic photocatalysts and the molecular ones, identifying different energy transfer pathways and their influence on selectivity and efficiency of chemical reactions. We foresee that the migration from optical to chemical hot spots will greatly assist the understanding of ongoing plasmonic chemistry.
AB - ConspectusIn recent years, the possibility to induce chemical transformations by using tunable plasmonic modes has opened the question of whether we can control or create chemical hot spots in these systems. This can be rationalized as the reactive analogue of the well-established concept of optical hot spots, which have drawn a great deal of attention to plasmonic nanostructures for their ability to circumvent the far-field diffraction limit of conventional optical elements.Although optical hot spots can be mainly defined by the geometry and permittivity of the nanostructures, the degrees of freedom influencing their photocatalytic properties appear to be much more numerous. In fact, the reactivity of plasmonic systems are deeply influenced by the dynamics and interplay of photons, plasmon-polaritons, carriers, phonons, and molecular states. These degrees of freedom can affect the reaction rates, the product selectivity, or the spatial localization of a chemical reaction. In this Account, we discuss the oportunities to control chemical hot spots by tuning the cascade of events that follows the excitation and decay of plasmonic modes in nanostructures.We discuss a series of techniques to spatially map and image plasmonic nanoscale reactivity at the single photocatalyst level. We show how to optimize the reactivity of carriers by manipulating their excitation and decay mechanisms in plasmonic nanoparticles. In addition, the tailored generation of non-thermal phonons in metallic nanostructures and their dissipation is shown as a promise to understand and exploit thermal photocatalysis at the nanoscale. Understanding and controlling these processes is essential for the rational design of solar nanometric photocatalysts.Nevertheless, the ultimate capability of a plasmonic photocatalyst to trigger a chemical reaction is correlated to its ability to navigate through, or even modify, the potential energy surface of a given chemical reaction. Here we reunite both worlds, the plasmonic photocatalysts and the molecular ones, identifying different energy transfer pathways and their influence on selectivity and efficiency of chemical reactions. We foresee that the migration from optical to chemical hot spots will greatly assist the understanding of ongoing plasmonic chemistry.
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/85071836460
U2 - 10.1021/acs.accounts.9b00234
DO - 10.1021/acs.accounts.9b00234
M3 - Article
C2 - 31430119
AN - SCOPUS:85071836460
SN - 0001-4842
VL - 52
SP - 2525
EP - 2535
JO - Accounts of Chemical Research
JF - Accounts of Chemical Research
IS - 9
ER -