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Facile fabrication of large-area hierarchical plasmonic cavities with broadband plasmon resonance for enhanced photocatalytic hydrogen evolution
Nano Research
Published: 29 August 2024
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Integrating hierarchical plasmonic cavities into photocatalysis offers a promising avenue for expanding the light utilization range to cover the entire solar spectrum. However, fabricating these nanostructures with seamless size transitions for a wide plasmon resonant range remains technically challenging, requiring precise nanofabrication control and often relying on expensive and laborious techniques like e-beam lithography and reactive ion etching. Herein, a one-step forming strategy was explored to fabricate simple yet hierarchical plasmonic cavities featuring the surface nanodome array-integrated plasmonic Fabry–Pérot cavity through a facile large-area nanoimprinting method. This design leverages a uniform feature size and periodic arrangement to broaden the light utilization range of TiO2 across the entire solar spectrum (200–2500 nm). It consists of an upper nanodome array cavity with vertically continuous graded sizes for broadband absorption (200–1500 nm), coupled with a bottom plate cavity that enlarges the overall cavity size to extend the range to 2500 nm. Remarkably, simply adjusting the thickness of the plate cavity can tune the resonant position, eliminating the need for expensive mold modifications. When combined with TiO2, this hierarchical plasmonic cavity significantly enhances the photocatalytic hydrogen evolution rate to 36.3 µmol/h, achieving a remarkable 9.8-fold increase compared to pure TiO2 under full-spectrum illumination. This approach offers a convenient and inexpensive alternative to sophisticated nanofabrication techniques for large-area hierarchical plasmonic cavities with broadband plasmon resonance to enhance the photocatalytic hydrogen evolution.

Research Article Issue
Bridging localized electron states of pyrite-type CoS2 cocatalyst for activated solar H2 evolution
Nano Research 2022, 15 (1): 202-208
Published: 21 April 2021
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The development of low-cost and high-active cocatalysts is one of the most significant links for photocatalytic water splitting. Herein, a novel strategy of electron delocalization modulation for transition metal sulfides has been developed by anion hybridization. P-modified CoS2 (CoS2|P) nanocrystals were firstly fabricated via a gas-solid reaction and coupled with CdS nanorods to construct a composite catalyst for solar H2 evolution reaction (HER). The CdS/CoS2|P catalyst shows an HER rate of 57.8 μmol·h−1, which is 18 times that of the bare CdS, 8 times that of the CdS/CoS2, and twice that of Pt/CdS. The reduced energy barrier and suppressed reverse reaction for HER on the catalyst have been predicted and explained by density functional theory (DFT) calculation. The underlying design strategy of novel cocatalysts by electron delocalization modulation may shed light on the rational development of other advanced catalysts for energy conversion.

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