4.8 Article

Plasmon Energy Transfer Driven by Electrochemical Tuning of Methylene Blue on Single Gold Nanorods

Journal

ACS NANO
Volume 17, Issue 18, Pages 18280-18289

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acsnano.3c05387

Keywords

plasmonic nanoparticles; spectroelectrochemistry; single-particle spectroscopy; leucomethylene blue; chemical interface damping; oligomerization

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In this study, resonance energy transfer (RET) between gold nanorods (AuNRs) and methylene blue (MB) was achieved using in situ single-particle spectroelectrochemistry, which eliminated the internal conversion and promoted efficient plasmonic photocatalysis.
Plasmonic photocatalysis has attracted interest for its potential to generate energy-efficient reactions, but ultrafast internal conversion limits efficient plasmon-based chemistry. Resonance energy transfer (RET) to surface adsorbates offers a way to outcompete internal conversion pathways and also eliminate the need for sacrificial counter-reactions. Herein, we demonstrate RET between methylene blue (MB) and gold nanorods (AuNRs) using in situ single-particle spectroelectrochemistry. During electrochemically driven reversible redox reactions between MB and leucomethylene blue (LMB), we show that the homogeneous line width is broadened when spectral overlap between AuNR scattering and absorption of MB is maximized, indicating RET. Additionally, electrochemical oxidative oligomerization of MB allowed additional dipole coupling to generate RET at lower energies. Time-dependent density functional theory-based simulated absorption provided theoretical insight into the optical properties, as MB molecules were electrochemically oligomerized. Our findings show a mechanism for driving efficient plasmon-assisted processes by RET through the change in the chemical states of surface adsorbates.

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