The Interaction of Atomic Hydrogen with Au under Optical Plasmonic Excitation
ORAL
Abstract
The interaction of Au with hydrogen, especially the formation of Au-H bonds, is far from being understood due to the inert nature of bulk Au. Since the Au is non-reactive, thermodynamics alone cannot drive the dissociation of H$_2$ due the large activation energy of 4.51 eV, leaving the difficult task to find methods to facilitate gold hydride formation. However, when irradiated with low intensity visible photons, nanometer sized gold structures produce localized surface plasmons, which decay into hot electrons able to dissociate H$_2$ molecules at the surface. Experimentally we find as a result of the dissociation reaction a change in the optical properties of the Au nanostructures, manifest as a blue-shift in the dielectric function. We will present work, wherein we combine the results of density functional theory (DFT) and insitu-spectroscopic ellipsometry, to justify the proposed mechanism of the blue-shift based on gold hydride formation, where the coverage of the hydride formation is directly proportional to the blue shift. We will also provide unique insights on the interaction of Au nanoparticles with atomic hydrogen. Work supported in part by the US Department of Energy.
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