Solar thermoplasmonic nanofurnace for high-temperature heterogeneous catalysis

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Abstract

Most of existing solar thermal technologies require highly concentrated solar power to operate in the temperature range 300-600 °C. Here, thin films of refractory plasmonic TiN cylindrical nanocavities manufactured via flexible and scalable process are presented. The fabricated TiN films show polarization-insensitive 95% broadband absorption in the visible and near-infrared spectral ranges and act as plasmonic "nanofurnaces" capable of reaching temperatures above 600 °C under moderately concentrated solar irradiation (&tild;20 Suns). The demonstrated structures can be used to control nanometer-scale chemistry with zeptoliter (10-21 L) volumetric precision, catalyzing C - C bond formation and melting inorganic deposits. Also shown is the possibility to perform solar thermal CO oxidation at rates of 16 mol h-1 m-2 and with a solar-to-heat thermoplasmonic efficiency of 63%. Access to scalable, cost-effective refractory plasmonic nanofurnaces opens the way to the development of modular solar thermal devices for sustainable catalytic processes.

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Naldoni, A., Kudyshev, Z. A., Mascaretti, L., Sarmah, S. P., Rej, S., Froning, J. P., … Zbořil, R. (2020). Solar thermoplasmonic nanofurnace for high-temperature heterogeneous catalysis. Nano Letters, 20(5), 3663–3672. https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.nanolett.0c00594

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