Photoactivity and Stability Co-Enhancement: When Localized Plasmons Meet Oxygen Vacancies in MgO

Durability is still one of the key obstacles for the further development of photocatalytic energy-conversion systems, especially low-dimensional ones. Encouragingly, recent studies show that nanoinsulators such as SiO2 and MgO exhibit substantially enhanced photocatalytic durability than the typical...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Liu, Z., Lu, Z., Bosman, M., Li, N., Frankcombe, T., Jia, Guohua, Tricoli, A., Liu, Y., Du, Y., Yin, Z.
Format: Journal Article
Published: Wiley 2018
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/73240
_version_ 1848762962523717632
author Liu, Z.
Lu, Z.
Bosman, M.
Li, N.
Frankcombe, T.
Jia, Guohua
Tricoli, A.
Liu, Y.
Du, Y.
Yin, Z.
author_facet Liu, Z.
Lu, Z.
Bosman, M.
Li, N.
Frankcombe, T.
Jia, Guohua
Tricoli, A.
Liu, Y.
Du, Y.
Yin, Z.
author_sort Liu, Z.
building Curtin Institutional Repository
collection Online Access
description Durability is still one of the key obstacles for the further development of photocatalytic energy-conversion systems, especially low-dimensional ones. Encouragingly, recent studies show that nanoinsulators such as SiO2 and MgO exhibit substantially enhanced photocatalytic durability than the typical semiconductor p25 TiO2. Extending this knowledge, MgO–Au plasmonic defect nanosystems are developed that combine the stable photoactivity from MgO surface defects with energy-focusing plasmonics from Au nanoparticles (NPs), where Au NPs are anchored onto monodispersed MgO nanotemplates. Theoretical calculations reveal that the midgap defect (MGD) states in MgO are generated by oxygen vacancies, which provide the main avenues for upward electron transitions under photoexcitation. These electrons drive stable proton photoreduction to H2 gas via water splitting. A synergistic interaction between Au's localized plasmons and MgO's oxygen vacancies is observed here, which enhances MgO's photoactivity and stability simultaneously. Such co-enhancement is attributed to the stable longitudinal-plasmon-free Au NPs, which provide robust hot electrons capable of overcoming the interband transition barrier (˜1.8 eV) to reach proton reduction potential for H2 generation. The demonstrated plasmonic defect nanosystems are expected to open a new avenue for developing highly endurable photoredox systems for the integration of multifunctionalities in energy conversion, environmental decontamination, and climate change mitigation.
first_indexed 2025-11-14T10:55:54Z
format Journal Article
id curtin-20.500.11937-73240
institution Curtin University Malaysia
institution_category Local University
last_indexed 2025-11-14T10:55:54Z
publishDate 2018
publisher Wiley
recordtype eprints
repository_type Digital Repository
spelling curtin-20.500.11937-732402019-02-19T05:48:14Z Photoactivity and Stability Co-Enhancement: When Localized Plasmons Meet Oxygen Vacancies in MgO Liu, Z. Lu, Z. Bosman, M. Li, N. Frankcombe, T. Jia, Guohua Tricoli, A. Liu, Y. Du, Y. Yin, Z. Durability is still one of the key obstacles for the further development of photocatalytic energy-conversion systems, especially low-dimensional ones. Encouragingly, recent studies show that nanoinsulators such as SiO2 and MgO exhibit substantially enhanced photocatalytic durability than the typical semiconductor p25 TiO2. Extending this knowledge, MgO–Au plasmonic defect nanosystems are developed that combine the stable photoactivity from MgO surface defects with energy-focusing plasmonics from Au nanoparticles (NPs), where Au NPs are anchored onto monodispersed MgO nanotemplates. Theoretical calculations reveal that the midgap defect (MGD) states in MgO are generated by oxygen vacancies, which provide the main avenues for upward electron transitions under photoexcitation. These electrons drive stable proton photoreduction to H2 gas via water splitting. A synergistic interaction between Au's localized plasmons and MgO's oxygen vacancies is observed here, which enhances MgO's photoactivity and stability simultaneously. Such co-enhancement is attributed to the stable longitudinal-plasmon-free Au NPs, which provide robust hot electrons capable of overcoming the interband transition barrier (˜1.8 eV) to reach proton reduction potential for H2 generation. The demonstrated plasmonic defect nanosystems are expected to open a new avenue for developing highly endurable photoredox systems for the integration of multifunctionalities in energy conversion, environmental decontamination, and climate change mitigation. 2018 Journal Article http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/73240 10.1002/smll.201803233 Wiley restricted
spellingShingle Liu, Z.
Lu, Z.
Bosman, M.
Li, N.
Frankcombe, T.
Jia, Guohua
Tricoli, A.
Liu, Y.
Du, Y.
Yin, Z.
Photoactivity and Stability Co-Enhancement: When Localized Plasmons Meet Oxygen Vacancies in MgO
title Photoactivity and Stability Co-Enhancement: When Localized Plasmons Meet Oxygen Vacancies in MgO
title_full Photoactivity and Stability Co-Enhancement: When Localized Plasmons Meet Oxygen Vacancies in MgO
title_fullStr Photoactivity and Stability Co-Enhancement: When Localized Plasmons Meet Oxygen Vacancies in MgO
title_full_unstemmed Photoactivity and Stability Co-Enhancement: When Localized Plasmons Meet Oxygen Vacancies in MgO
title_short Photoactivity and Stability Co-Enhancement: When Localized Plasmons Meet Oxygen Vacancies in MgO
title_sort photoactivity and stability co-enhancement: when localized plasmons meet oxygen vacancies in mgo
url http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/73240