Construction of Spatially Separated Gold Nanocrystal/Cuprous Oxide Architecture for Plasmon-Driven CO<sub>2</sub> Reduction
Henglei Jia, Fan Li, Tsz Him Chow, Xiyue Liu, Han Zhang, Yao Lu, Jianfang Wang, Chun‐yang Zhang
Abstract
Plasmonic hot electrons have shown great potential in photocatalysis, but little is known about the hot hole-driven chemical reactions due to the lack of desired plasmonic metal/p-type semiconductor architectures. Herein, we describe a general and robust strategy for the site-selective growth of a p-type semiconductor, Cu2O on Au nanocrystals (NCs), to produce diverse spatially separated Au/Cu2O heterostructures. The preferential growth of Cu2O on the tips/ends/edges of Au NCs is directed by the sparse coverage of the surfactant molecules at the high-curvature sites of Au NCs. The obtained dumbbell-shaped nanostructures serve as the ideal platforms for probing the hot-hole-mediated CO2 reduction reaction. Benefiting from the hot-hole injection, a new reaction pathway is unlocked, and the C2 product activity and selectivity are significantly improved. This study demonstrates the genuine superiority of the dumbbell-shaped nanostructures in photocatalysis, offering a new unique avenue to explore the underlying mechanism of hot-hole-mediated chemical reactions.