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Simple experimental procedures to distinguish photothermal from hot-carrier processes in plasmonics

Light absorption and scattering of plasmonic metal nanoparticles can lead to non-equilibrium charge carriers, intense electromagnetic near-fields, and heat generation, with promising applications in a vast range of fields, from chemical and physical sensing, to nanomedicine, and photocatalysis for the sustainable production of fuels and chemicals. Disentangling the relative contribution of thermal and non-thermal contributions in plasmon driven processes is however difficult. Nanoscale temperature measurements are technically challenging and macroscale experiments are often characterized by collective heating effects, which tend to make the actual temperature increase unpredictable. This work is intended to help the reader experimentally detect and quantify photothermal effects in plasmon-driven chemical reactions, to discriminate their contribution from the one due to photochemical processes, and to cast a critical eye on the current literature. To this aim, we review, and in some cases propose, seven simple experimental procedures, which do not require the use of complex or expensive thermal microscopy techniques. These proposed procedures are adaptable to a wide range of experiments and fields of research where photothermal effects need to be assessed, such as plasmonic-assisted chemistry, heterogeneous catalysis, photovoltaics, biosensing and enhanced molecular spectroscopy.

preprint2020arXivOpen access
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