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1.
Inorg Chem ; 58(10): 6845-6857, 2019 May 20.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31070366

ABSTRACT

A family of solid solutions, Cu5(Ta1- xNb x)11O30 (0 ≤ x ≤ 0.4), was investigated as p-type semiconductors for their band gaps and energies and for their activity for the reduction of water to molecular hydrogen. Compositions from 0 to 40 mol % niobium were prepared in high purity by solid-state methods, accompanied by only very small increases in the lattice parameters of ∼0.05% and with the niobium and tantalum cations disordered over the same atomic sites. However, an increasing niobium content causes a significant decrease in the bandgap size from ∼2.58 to ∼2.05 eV owing to the decreasing conduction band energies. Linear-sweep voltammetry showed an increase in cathodic photocurrents with niobium content and applied negative potential of up to -0.6 mA/cm2 (pH ∼7.3; AM 1.5 G light filter with an irradiation intensity of ∼100 mW/cm2). The cathodic photocurrents could be partially stabilized by heating the polycrystalline films in air at 550 °C for 1 h to produce surface nanoislands of CuO or using protecting layers of aluminum-doped zinc oxide and titania. Aqueous suspensions of the Cu5(Ta1- xNb x)11O30 powders were also found to be active for hydrogen production under visible-light irradiation in a 20% aqueous methanol solution with the highest apparent quantum yields for the 10% and 20% Nb-substituted samples. Electronic structure calculations show that the increased photocurrents and hydroen evolution activities of the solid solutions arise near the percolation threshold of the niobate/tantalate framework wherein the Nb cations establish an extended -O-Nb-O-Nb-O- diffusion pathway for the minority carriers. The latter also reveals a novel pathway for enhancing charge separation as a function of the niobium-oxide connectivity. Thus, these results illustrate the advantages of using solid solutions to achieve the smaller bandgap sizes and band energies that are needed for solar-driven photocatalytic reactions.

2.
Dalton Trans ; 47(32): 11158-11165, 2018 Aug 14.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30043788

ABSTRACT

A series of Ge-doped monophase Y2O3:Ho,Yb phosphor materials has been synthesized using solid state reactions. The addition of Ge to the Y2O3 host decreases the Ho green emission (5F4/5S2 → 5I8) and increases the red emission (5F5 → 5I8), providing a new means to tune the green-to-red emission intensity ratio. It is proposed that the Ge-induced multiphonon relaxation process enhances the transition from the intermediate state 5I6 to 5I7, which tunes the green and red emission intensities. Most importantly, with the addition of Ge, the non-thermally coupled Ho green and red emitting levels are associated together, and the red-to-green emission intensity ratio becomes sensitive to environmental temperature change. The absolute thermal sensitivity is enhanced by a factor of >5 times that in the absence of Ge. The matched green and red emission intensities, as well as the high thermal sensitivity, make Y2O3:Ho,Yb,Ge an ideal probe for optical temperature sensing at the single particle level in live biological samples. This study demonstrates a new mechanism to channel non-thermally coupled energy levels to achieve high temperature sensitivity.

3.
ACS Omega ; 3(12): 16409-16415, 2018 Dec 31.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31458277

ABSTRACT

The growth of high surface area alumina has been investigated with the use of a liquid Galinstan alloy [66.5% (wt %) Ga, 20.5% In and 13.0% Sn] as an activator for aluminum. In this process, the aluminum is slowly dissolved into the gallium-indium-tin alloy, which is then selectively oxidized at ambient temperature and pressure under a humid stream of flowing CO2 or N2 to yield amorphous alumina. This preparative route represents a simple and low toxicity approach to obtain amorphous high surface area alumina with very low water content. The as-synthesized high surface area alumina aerogel was a blue-colored solid owing to the Rayleigh scattering by its dendritic fibrous nanostructure consisting of mainly alumina with small amounts of water. Upon annealing at 850 °C, the amorphous product transformed into γ-Al2O3, as well as θ-Al2O3 upon annealing at 1050 °C. Elemental analysis by energy-dispersive spectroscopy provides further evidence that the high surface area alumina is composed of only aluminum and oxygen. The surface area of the amorphous alumina varied from ∼79 to ∼140 m2/g, depending on the initial weight percentage of aluminum used in the alloy. A correlation between the initial concentration of aluminum in the alloy and the surface area of the alumina product was found to peak at ∼30% Al. These results suggest a novel route to the formation of amorphous alumina aerogel-type materials.

4.
ACS Appl Mater Interfaces ; 9(31): 25962-25969, 2017 Aug 09.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28714663

ABSTRACT

Gold nanorods show great potential in harvesting natural sunlight and generating hot charge carriers that can be employed to produce electrical or chemical energies. We show that photochemical reduction of Pt(IV) to Pt metal mainly takes place at the ends of gold nanorods (AuNRs), suggesting photon-induced hot electrons are localized in a time-averaged manner at AuNR ends. To use these hot electrons efficiently, a novel synthetic method to selectively overgrow Pt at the ends of AuNRs has been developed. These Pt-end-capped AuNRs show relatively high activity for the production of hydrogen gas using artificial white light, natural sunlight, and more importantly, near IR light at 976 nm. Tuning of the surface plasmon resonance (SPR) wavelength of AuNRs changes the hydrogen gas production rate, indicating that SPR is involved in hot electron generation and photoreduction of hydrogen ions. This study shows that gold nanorods are excellent for converting low-energy photons into high-energy hot electrons, which can be used to drive chemical reactions at their surfaces.

5.
Dalton Trans ; 46(32): 10657-10664, 2017 Aug 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28443862

ABSTRACT

Extensive research has been conducted with the goal to find a single bandgap material that can absorb visible light and efficiently drive the catalysis of water to both hydrogen and oxygen. The p-type MnV2O6 (C2/m, Z = 2, a = 9.289 Å, b = 3.535 Å, and c = 6.763 Å, ß = 112.64°), synthesized via solid-state techniques, was investigated for its potential use in the visible-light photocatalysis of water. Mott-Schottky analysis was used to experimentally determine the energetic positions of the valence and conduction bands as +0.985 V and -0.464 V, respectively, at pH 5.68 vs. RHE. These are found to be suitable potentials to drive the reduction and oxidation of water under irradiation. The bandgap transitions, probed using spin-polarized density functional calculations, consist of the excitation of electrons from the half-filled Mn 3d5 orbitals to the empty V 3d0 orbitals. Both hydrogen and oxygen gas were observed as products during suspended-particle photocatalysis experiments under visible-light irradiation. The rate and total moles of gas produced were found to increase with the reaction temperature. As the temperature was raised from 30 °C to 37 °C and 44 °C, the moles of hydrogen produced over 6 hours increased by ∼1.5 and ∼2.5 times. Only oxygen is produced in pure water, showing that methanol is needed to drive hydrogen production.

6.
ACS Comb Sci ; 17(12): 742-51, 2015 Dec 14.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26505910

ABSTRACT

High-throughput combinatorial methods have been useful in identifying new oxide semiconductors with the potential to be applied to solar water splitting. Most of these techniques have been limited to producing and screening oxide phases formed at temperatures below approximately 550 °C. We report the development of a combinatorial approach to discover and optimize high temperature phases for photoelectrochemical water splitting. As a demonstration material, we chose to produce thin films of high temperature CuNb oxide phases by inkjet printing on two different substrates: fluorine-doped tin oxide and crystalline Si, which required different sample pyrolysis procedures. The selection of pyrolysis parameters, such as temperature/time programs, and the use of oxidizing, nonreactive or reducing atmospheres determines the composition of the thin film materials and their photoelectrochemical performance. XPS, XRD, and SEM analyses were used to determine the composition and oxidation states within the copper niobium oxide phases and to then guide the production of target Cu(1+)Nb(5+)-oxide phases. The charge carrier dynamics of the thin films produced by the inkjet printing are compared with pure CuNbO3 microcrystalline material obtained from inorganic bulk synthesis.


Subject(s)
Copper/chemistry , Electrochemical Techniques , Hot Temperature , Niobium/chemistry , Oxides/chemistry , Photochemical Processes , Water/chemistry , Particle Size , Surface Properties
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