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Transition-Metal Decorated Aluminum Nanocrystals

Accepted version
Peer-reviewed

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Type

Article

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Authors

Swearer, Dayne F 
Leary, Rowan K 
Newell, Ryan 
Yazdi, Sadegh 
Robatjazi, Hossein 

Abstract

Recently, aluminum has been established as an earth-abundant alternative to gold and silver for plasmonic applications. Particularly, aluminum nanocrystals have shown to be promising plasmonic photocatalysts, especially when coupled with catalytic metals or oxides into “antenna-reactor” heterostructures. Here, a simple polyol synthesis is presented as a flexible route to produce aluminum nanocrystals decorated with eight varieties of size-tunable transition-metal nanoparticle islands, many of which have precedence as heterogeneous catalysts. High-resolution and three-dimensional structural analysis using scanning transmission electron microscopy and electron tomography shows that abundant nanoparticle island decoration in the catalytically relevant few-nanometer size range can be achieved, with many islands spaced closely to their neighbors. When coupled with the Al nanocrystal plasmonic antenna, these small decorating islands will experience increased light absorption and strong hot-spot generation. This combination makes transition-metal decorated aluminum nanocrystals a promising material platform to develop plasmonic photocatalysis, surface-enhanced spectroscopies, and quantum plasmonics.

Description

Keywords

plasmonics, photocatalysis, aluminum, nanomaterials, antenna-reactor, electron tomography

Journal Title

ACS NANO

Conference Name

Journal ISSN

1936-0851
1936-086X

Volume Title

11

Publisher

Sponsorship
European Research Council (291522)
This research was financially supported by the National Science Foundation (NSF) grant ECCS-1610229, the Air Force Office of Scientific Research Multidisciplinary Research Program of the University Research Initiative (AFOSR MURI FA9550-15- 1-0022), the Army Research Office (MURI W911NF-12-1- 0407), Defense Threat Reduction Agency (HDTRA 1-16-1- 0042), the Welch Foundation under grants C-1220 (N.H.) and C-1222 (P.N.) and by the American Chemical Society Petroleum Research Fund under grant no. 56256 DNI5 (E.R.). D.S. acknowledges the National Science Foundation for a Graduate Research Fellowship under grant no. 1450681. D.R. acknowledges support by the Department of Defense (DoD) through the National Defense Science and Engineering Graduate Fellowship (NDSEG) Program. R.L. acknowledges a Junior Research Fellowship at Clare College, Cambridge. The research leading to these results has received funding from the European Research Council under the European Union’s Seventh Framework Programme (FP7/2007-2013)/ERC grant agreement 291522-3DIMAGE as well as from the European Union Seventh Framework Programme under grant agreement 312483-ESTEEM2 (Integrated Infrastructure Initiative − I3).