4.7 Article

Challenges and prospects of plasmonic metasurfaces for photothermal catalysis

Journal

NANOPHOTONICS
Volume 11, Issue 13, Pages 3035-3056

Publisher

WALTER DE GRUYTER GMBH
DOI: 10.1515/nanoph-2022-0073

Keywords

gas phase; photocatalysis; photothermal catalysis; plasmonic metasurfaces; solar fuels

Funding

  1. Ministry of Education, Youth and Sports of the Czech Republic through the Operational Programme Research, Development and Education -European Regional Development Fund [CZ.02.1.01/0.0/0.0/15_003/0000416]
  2. Czech Science Foundation (GACR) [22-26416S]
  3. National Science Foundation (NSF) [IIP-1941227, 2029553-ECCS]
  4. Air Force Office for Scientific Research (AFOSR) [FA9550-20-1-0124]
  5. European Commission (H2020 RIA-CE-NMBP-25 Program) [862030]
  6. European Commission (H2020 LC-SC3-2019-NZE-RES-CC -Grant) [884444]

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Solar-thermal technologies using plasmonic metasurfaces show great potential in photothermal catalysis by efficiently converting solar energy to heat, achieving broadband light absorption, and promoting faster reaction rates. However, their application in this field has been largely overlooked.
Solar-thermal technologies for converting chemicals using thermochemistry require extreme light concentration. Exploiting plasmonic nanostructures can dramatically increase the reaction rates by providing more efficient solar-to-heat conversion by broadband light absorption. Moreover, hot-carrier and local field enhancement effects can alter the reaction pathways. Such discoveries have boosted the field of photothermal catalysis, which aims at driving industrially-relevant chemical reactions using solar illumination rather than conventional heat sources. Nevertheless, only large arrays of plasmonic nano-units on a substrate, i.e., plasmonic metasurfaces, allow a quasi-unitary and broadband solar light absorption within a limited thickness (hundreds of nanometers) for practical applications. Through moderate light concentration (similar to 10 Suns), metasurfaces reach the same temperatures as conventional thermochemical reactors, or plasmonic nanoparticle bed reactors reach under similar to 100 Suns. Plasmonic metasurfaces, however, have been mostly neglected so far for applications in the field of photothermal catalysis. In this Perspective, we discuss the potentialities of plasmonic metasurfaces in this emerging area of research. We present numerical simulations and experimental case studies illustrating how broadband absorption can be achieved within a limited thickness of these nanostructured materials. The approach highlights the synergy among different enhancement effects related to the ordered array of plasmonic units and the efficient heat transfer promoting faster dynamics than thicker structures (such as powdered catalysts). We foresee that plasmonic metasurfaces can play an important role in developing modular-like structures for the conversion of chemical feedstock into fuels without requiring extreme light concentrations. Customized metasurface-based systems could lead to small-scale and low-cost decentralized reactors instead of large-scale, infrastructure-intensive power plants.

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