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Dive into the research topics where Hangqi Zhao is active.

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Featured researches published by Hangqi Zhao.


Nature Communications | 2015

Distinguishing between plasmon-induced and photoexcited carriers in a device geometry.

Bob Y. Zheng; Hangqi Zhao; Alejandro Manjavacas; Michael J. McClain; Peter Nordlander; Naomi J. Halas

The use of surface plasmons, charge density oscillations of conduction electrons of metallic nanostructures, to boost the efficiency of light-harvesting devices through increased light-matter interactions could drastically alter how sunlight is converted into electricity or fuels. These excitations can decay directly into energetic electron–hole pairs, useful for photocurrent generation or photocatalysis. However, the mechanisms behind plasmonic carrier generation remain poorly understood. Here we use nanowire-based hot-carrier devices on a wide-bandgap semiconductor to show that plasmonic carrier generation is proportional to internal field-intensity enhancement and occurs independently of bulk absorption. We also show that plasmon-induced hot electrons have higher energies than carriers generated by direct excitation and that reducing the barrier height allows for the collection of carriers from plasmons and direct photoexcitation. Our results provide a route to increasing the efficiency of plasmonic hot-carrier devices, which could lead to more efficient devices for converting sunlight into usable energy.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2016

Heterometallic antenna−reactor complexes for photocatalysis

Dayne F. Swearer; Hangqi Zhao; Linan Zhou; Chao Zhang; Hossein Robatjazi; John Mark P. Martirez; Caroline M. Krauter; Sadegh Yazdi; Michael J. McClain; Emilie Ringe; Emily A. Carter; Peter Nordlander; Naomi J. Halas

Significance Plasmon-enhanced photocatalysis holds significant promise for controlling chemical reaction rates and outcomes. Unfortunately, traditional plasmonic metals have limited surface chemistry, while conventional catalysts are poor optical absorbers. By placing a catalytic reactor particle adjacent to a plasmonic antenna, the highly efficient and tunable light-harvesting capacities of plasmonic nanoparticles can be exploited to drastically increase absorption and hot-carrier generation in the reactor nanoparticles. We demonstrate this antenna−reactor concept by showing that plasmonic aluminum nanocrystal antennas decorated with small catalytic palladium reactor particles exhibit dramatically increased photocatalytic activity over their individual components. The modularity of this approach provides for independent control of chemical and light-harvesting properties and paves the way for the rational, predictive design of efficient plasmonic photocatalysts. Metallic nanoparticles with strong optically resonant properties behave as nanoscale optical antennas, and have recently shown extraordinary promise as light-driven catalysts. Traditionally, however, heterogeneous catalysis has relied upon weakly light-absorbing metals such as Pd, Pt, Ru, or Rh to lower the activation energy for chemical reactions. Here we show that coupling a plasmonic nanoantenna directly to catalytic nanoparticles enables the light-induced generation of hot carriers within the catalyst nanoparticles, transforming the entire complex into an efficient light-controlled reactive catalyst. In Pd-decorated Al nanocrystals, photocatalytic hydrogen desorption closely follows the antenna-induced local absorption cross-section of the Pd islands, and a supralinear power dependence strongly suggests that hot-carrier-induced desorption occurs at the Pd island surface. When acetylene is present along with hydrogen, the selectivity for photocatalytic ethylene production relative to ethane is strongly enhanced, approaching 40:1. These observations indicate that antenna−reactor complexes may greatly expand possibilities for developing designer photocatalytic substrates.


Nature Communications | 2017

Plasmon-induced selective carbon dioxide conversion on earth-abundant aluminum-cuprous oxide antenna-reactor nanoparticles

Hossein Robatjazi; Hangqi Zhao; Dayne F. Swearer; Nathaniel J. Hogan; Linan Zhou; Alessandro Alabastri; Michael J. McClain; Peter Nordlander; Naomi J. Halas

The rational combination of plasmonic nanoantennas with active transition metal-based catalysts, known as ‘antenna-reactor’ nanostructures, holds promise to expand the scope of chemical reactions possible with plasmonic photocatalysis. Here, we report earth-abundant embedded aluminum in cuprous oxide antenna-reactor heterostructures that operate more effectively and selectively for the reverse water-gas shift reaction under milder illumination than in conventional thermal conditions. Through rigorous comparison of the spatial temperature profile, optical absorption, and integrated electric field enhancement of the catalyst, we have been able to distinguish between competing photothermal and hot-carrier driven mechanistic pathways. The antenna-reactor geometry efficiently harnesses the plasmon resonance of aluminum to supply energetic hot-carriers and increases optical absorption in cuprous oxide for selective carbon dioxide conversion to carbon monoxide with visible light. The transition from noble metals to aluminum based antenna-reactor heterostructures in plasmonic photocatalysis provides a sustainable route to high-value chemicals and reaffirms the practical potential of plasmon-mediated chemical transformations.Plasmon-enhanced photocatalysis holds promise for the control of chemical reactions. Here the authors report an Al@Cu2O heterostructure based on earth abundant materials to transform CO2 into CO at significantly milder conditions.


ACS Nano | 2016

Chiral and Achiral Nanodumbbell Dimers: The Effect of Geometry on Plasmonic Properties

Kyle W. Smith; Hangqi Zhao; Hui Zhang; Ana Sánchez-Iglesias; Marek Grzelczak; Yumin Wang; Wei-Shun Chang; Peter Nordlander; Luis M. Liz-Marzán; Stephan Link

Metal nanoparticles with a dumbbell-like geometry have plasmonic properties similar to those of their nanorod counterparts, but the unique steric constraints induced by their enlarged tips result in distinct geometries when self-assembled. Here, we investigate gold dumbbells that are assembled into dimers within polymeric micelles. A single-particle approach with correlated scanning electron microscopy and dark-field scattering spectroscopy reveals the effects of dimer geometry variation on the scattering properties. The dimers are prepared using exclusively achiral reagents, and the resulting dimer solution produces no detectable ensemble circular dichroism response. However, single-particle circular differential scattering measurements uncover that this dimer sample is a racemic mixture of individual nanostructures with significant positive and negative chiroptical signals. These measurements are complemented with detailed simulations that confirm the influence of various symmetry elements on the overall peak resonance energy, spectral line shape, and circular differential scattering response. This work expands the current understanding of the influence self-assembled geometries have on plasmonic properties, particularly with regard to chiral and/or racemic samples which may have significant optical activity that may be overlooked when using exclusively ensemble characterization techniques.


Nano Letters | 2016

Absorption Spectroscopy of an Individual Fano Cluster

Mustafa Yorulmaz; Anneli Hoggard; Hangqi Zhao; Fangfang Wen; Wei-Shun Chang; Naomi J. Halas; Peter Nordlander; Stephan Link

Plasmonic clusters can exhibit Fano resonances with unique and tunable asymmetric line shapes, which arise due to the coupling of bright and dark plasmon modes within each multiparticle structure. These structures are capable of generating remarkably large local electromagnetic field enhancements and should give rise to high hot carrier yields relative to other plasmonic nanostructures. While the scattering properties of individual plasmonic Fano resonances have been characterized extensively both experimentally and theoretically, their absorption properties, critical for hot carrier generation, have not yet been measured. Here, we utilize single-particle absorption spectroscopy based on photothermal imaging to distinguish between the radiative and nonradiative properties of an individual Fano cluster. In observing the absorption spectrum of individual Fano clusters, we directly verify the theoretical prediction that while Fano interference may be prominent in scattering, it is completely absent in absorption. Our results provide microscopic insight into the nature of Fano interference in systems of coupled plasmonic nanoparticles and should pave the way for the optimization of hot carrier production using plasmonic Fano clusters.


Science | 2018

Quantifying hot carrier and thermal contributions in plasmonic photocatalysis

Linan Zhou; Dayne F. Swearer; Chao Zhang; Hossein Robatjazi; Hangqi Zhao; Luke Henderson; Liangliang Dong; Phillip Christopher; Emily A. Carter; Peter Nordlander; Naomi J. Halas

Hot carriers reducing thermal barriers Plasmonic catalysts can generate hot charge carriers that can activate reactants and, in turn, reduce the overall barrier to a reaction. Zhou et al. studied the decomposition of ammonia to hydrogen on a copper alloy nanostructure that absorbed light and generated electrons that activated nitrogen atoms on ruthenium surface atoms (see the Perspective by Cortés). By measuring reaction rates at different wavelengths, light intensities, and catalyst surface temperatures, the light-induced reduction of the apparent activation barrier was quantified. Science, this issue p. 69; see also p. 28 A Ru-Cu alloy plasmonic photocatalyst substantially reduced the thermal activation barrier for ammonia decomposition. Photocatalysis based on optically active, “plasmonic” metal nanoparticles has emerged as a promising approach to facilitate light-driven chemical conversions under far milder conditions than thermal catalysis. However, an understanding of the relation between thermal and electronic excitations has been lacking. We report the substantial light-induced reduction of the thermal activation barrier for ammonia decomposition on a plasmonic photocatalyst. We introduce the concept of a light-dependent activation barrier to account for the effect of light illumination on electronic and thermal excitations in a single unified picture. This framework provides insight into the specific role of hot carriers in plasmon-mediated photochemistry, which is critically important for designing energy-efficient plasmonic photocatalysts.


Applied Physics Letters | 2018

A room-temperature mid-infrared photodetector for on-chip molecular vibrational spectroscopy

Bob Y. Zheng; Hangqi Zhao; Ben Cerjan; Sadegh Yazdi; Emilie Ringe; Peter Nordlander; Naomi J. Halas

Infrared (IR) photodetection is of major scientific and technical interest since virtually all molecules exhibit characteristic vibrational modes in the mid-infrared region of the spectrum, giving rise to molecular spectroscopy and chemical imaging in this wavelength range. High-resolution IR spectroscopies, such as Fourier Transform IR spectroscopy, typically require large, bulky optical measurement systems and expensive photodetector components. Here, we present a high-responsivity photodetector for the mid-IR spectral region which operates at room temperature. Fabricated from silicon and aluminum, the photodetection mechanism is based on free carrier absorption, giving rise to a photoresponse rivalling commercially available cooled IR photodetectors. We demonstrate that infrared spectra of molecules deposited on this detector can be obtained by a direct electrical read-out. This work could pave the way for simple, fully integrated chemical sensors and other applications, such as chemical imaging, which would benefit from the combination of mid-IR detection, room-temperature operation, and ultracompact portability.Infrared (IR) photodetection is of major scientific and technical interest since virtually all molecules exhibit characteristic vibrational modes in the mid-infrared region of the spectrum, giving rise to molecular spectroscopy and chemical imaging in this wavelength range. High-resolution IR spectroscopies, such as Fourier Transform IR spectroscopy, typically require large, bulky optical measurement systems and expensive photodetector components. Here, we present a high-responsivity photodetector for the mid-IR spectral region which operates at room temperature. Fabricated from silicon and aluminum, the photodetection mechanism is based on free carrier absorption, giving rise to a photoresponse rivalling commercially available cooled IR photodetectors. We demonstrate that infrared spectra of molecules deposited on this detector can be obtained by a direct electrical read-out. This work could pave the way for simple, fully integrated chemical sensors and other applications, such as chemical imaging, which...


Proceedings of SPIE | 2015

Distinguishing between plasmon-induced and photo-excited carriers in a device geometry (Presentation Recording)

Hangqi Zhao; Bob Y. Zheng; Alejandro Manjavacas; Michael J. McClain; Peter Nordlander; Naomi J. Halas

The use of surface plasmons, charge density oscillations of conduction electrons of metallic nanostructures, could drastically alter how sunlight is converted into electricity or fuels by increasing the efficiency of light-harvesting devices through enhanced light-matter interactions. Surface plasmons can decay directly into energetic electron-hole pairs, or “hot” carriers, which can be used for photocurrent generation or photocatalysis. However, little has been understood about the fundamental mechanisms behind plasmonic carrier generation. Here we use metallic nano-wire based hot carrier devices on a wide-bandgap semiconductor substrate to show that plasmonic hot carrier generation is proportional to field intensity enhancement instead of bulk material absorption. We also show that interband carrier generation results in less energetic carriers than plasmon-induced generation, and a plasmon is required to inject electrons over a large energy barrier. Finite Difference Time Domain (FDTD) method is used for theoretical calculations, which match well with experimental results. This work points to a clear route to increasing the efficiency of plasmonic hot carrier devices and drastically simplifies the theoretical framework for understanding the mechanisms of hot carrier generation.


Nano Letters | 2016

Al–Pd Nanodisk Heterodimers as Antenna–Reactor Photocatalysts

Chao Zhang; Hangqi Zhao; Linan Zhou; Andrea E. Schlather; Liangliang Dong; Michael J. McClain; Dayne F. Swearer; Peter Nordlander; Naomi J. Halas


Journal of Physical Chemistry C | 2016

Laser-Induced Spectral Hole-Burning through a Broadband Distribution of Au Nanorods

Christopher J. DeSantis; Da Huang; Hui Zhang; Nathaniel J. Hogan; Hangqi Zhao; Yifei Zhang; Alejandro Manjavacas; Yue Zhang; Wei-Shun Chang; Peter Nordlander; Stephan Link; Naomi J. Halas

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