Probing Redox Photocatalysis of Trapped Electrons and Holes on

Feb 16, 2012 - The Journal of Physical Chemistry C 2016 120 (37), 20668-20676 .... Journal of Molecular Catalysis A: Chemical 2016 421, 1-15 ... Photo...
0 downloads 0 Views 1MB Size
Communication pubs.acs.org/JACS

Probing Redox Photocatalysis of Trapped Electrons and Holes on Single Sb-doped Titania Nanorod Surfaces Weilin Xu,†,‡ Prashant K. Jain,†,‡,§ Brandon J. Beberwyck,‡,∥ and A. Paul Alivisatos*,†,‡,∥ †

Department of Chemistry, University of California, Berkeley, California 94720, United States Materials Sciences Division, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, Berkeley, California 94720, United States § Miller Institute for Basic Research in Science, University of California, Berkeley, California 94720, United States ∥ Department of Materials Science and Engineering, University of California, Berkeley, California 94720, United States ‡

S Supporting Information *

been extensively validated by the detection of these two radicals during the TiO2 photocatalytic reactions at the ensemble10−18 and single-molecule19−21 levels. Photochemical reactions and photocatalysis are known to be based on these two basic radicals h+/OH• and e−/O2−• or their associated catalytic sites, although the nature of these two basic catalytic sites has not been clarified.22,23 Here, on the basis of the fact that both of these radicals or active sites h+/OH• and e−/O2−• can react oxidatively with nonfluorescent amplex red to form the fluorescent product resorufin (Scheme 1B),24 the two photocatalytic redox reactions were studied in conjunction using the same single-molecule detection scheme. We have obtained new insight into the active sites involved in h+/OH• and e−/O2−•, which can be elucidated by a model involving the charged microenvironments around the active sites. Anatase TiO2 nanorods were synthesized according to the literature25 and then doped with antimony (Sb) [for details, see the Supporting Information (SI)]. Transmission electron microscopy (TEM) showed that the length and diameter of these Sb-doped TiO2 nanorods were ∼42 nm and ∼2.4 nm, respectively (Figure 1). Diffuse reflectance and absorbance

ABSTRACT: We used a fluorogenic reaction to study in conjunction the photocatalytic properties for both active sites (trapped photogenerated electrons and holes) on individual Sb-doped TiO2 nanorods with single-molecule fluorescence microscopy. It was found that active sites around trapped holes show higher activity, stronger binding ability, and a different dissociation mechanism for the same substrate and product molecules in comparison with the active sites around trapped electrons. These differences could be elucidated by a model involving the charged microenvironments around the active sites.

S

ince the discovery of photoinduced decomposition of water on a TiO2 electrode,1 TiO2-based photocatalysts have attracted wide attention.2−8 When TiO2 is exposed to light of energy greater than the band-gap energy, electrons are excited from its valence band into the conduction band to form spatially separated electron/hole (e−/h+) pairs by light absorption. These photogenerated charge carriers can either recombine or become trapped and react with electron donors or acceptors adsorbed on the surface of the photocatalyst.9 As shown in Scheme 1A, in an aqueous environment, photoScheme 1. (A) Scheme for the Generation of Photogenerated Electron/Hole Pairs and Subsequent Trapping by the Chemicals Adsorbed on a TiO2-Based Photocatalyst Surface To Form Two Radicals; (B) Reactions of Hydroxyl and Superoxide Anion Radicals with Amplex Red To Form the Fluorescent Product Resorufin

Figure 1. (A) TEM image of Sb-doped TiO2 nanorods. (B) Diameter distribution (average 2.4 nm). (C) Length distribution (average 42 nm).

spectroscopy (Figure 2A) revealed that the band gap of the unmodified TiO2 nanorods (white) was ∼3.3 eV, while the onset of the optical absorption of the Sb-doped TiO2 nanorods (yellowish) was lowered to ∼2 eV (∼600 nm). Since Sb doping on TiO2 could not lead to the formation of oxygen vacancies,26 this sub-band-gap red absorption in the Sb-doped TiO2 nanocrystals is likely due to intraband transitions.5,27 For single-molecule reaction experiments, individual Sbdoped TiO2 nanorods were immobilized on a quartz slide

generated electrons are trapped by adsorbed oxygen, generating bound superoxide anion radicals (O2−•), and photogenerated holes are trapped by adsorbed water or hydroxyl (OH−), generating bound hydroxyl radicals (OH•).2−4 This scheme has © 2012 American Chemical Society

Received: October 24, 2011 Published: February 16, 2012 3946

dx.doi.org/10.1021/ja210010k | J. Am. Chem. Soc. 2012, 134, 3946−3949

Journal of the American Chemical Society

Communication

single-product fluorescence bursts to the oxidation of amplex red to form resorufin by either one of these two radicals rather than the photogenerated electrons or holes. In the single-molecule trajectories (Figure 2C), each sudden intensity increase corresponds to the oxidative formation of a single product molecule at a reactive site on a Sb-doped TiO2 nanorod. Here the reactive site on the Sb-doped TiO2 could be defined as a site on which an e−/h+ pair formed by an absorbed photon is trapped by O2ads or H2Oads/OH−ads to form reactive radicals. Accordingly, we classify active sites on TiO2-based photocatalysts into two types: h+/OH• and e−/O2−•. Sudden intensity decreases in trajectories could be due to (1) photobleaching of product molecules; (2) fluorescence blinking of product molecules; (3) product dissociation from the reactive site; or (4) further oxidation of the fluorescent product resorufin to form nonfluorescent resazurin. Under similar laser excitation and buffer conditions, control experiments with resorufin but no quenchers on the Sb-doped TiO2 surface showed that the average blinking on time was ∼16 s (Figure S2) and the average photobleaching time was even longer than 16 s. Both of them are much longer than the average ton in the fluorescence trajectories (typically