Two-dimensional amorphous NiO as a plasmonic photocatalyst for solar H2 evolution

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Abstract

Amorphous materials are usually evaluated as photocatalytically inactive due to the amorphous nature-induced self-trapping of tail states, in spite of their achievements in electrochemistry. NiO crystals fail to act as an individual reactor for photocatalytic H2 evolution because of the intrinsic hole doping, regardless of their impressive cocatalytic ability for proton/electron transfer. Here we demonstrate that two-dimensional amorphous NiO nanostructure can act as an efficient and robust photocatalyst for solar H2 evolution without any cocatalysts. Further, the antenna effect of surface plasmon resonance can be introduced to construct an incorporate antenna-reactor structure by increasing the electron doping. The solar H2 evolution rate is improved by a factor of 19.4 through the surface plasmon resonance-mediated charge releasing. These findings thus open a door to applications of two-dimensional amorphous NiO as an advanced photocatalyst.

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Lin, Z., Du, C., Yan, B., Wang, C., & Yang, G. (2018). Two-dimensional amorphous NiO as a plasmonic photocatalyst for solar H2 evolution. Nature Communications, 9(1). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-018-06456-y

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