Nanobionics-Driven Synthesis of Molybdenum Oxide Nanosheets with Tunable Plasmonic Resonances in Visible Light Regions

ACS Appl Mater Interfaces. 2022 Dec 14;14(49):55285-55294. doi: 10.1021/acsami.2c19154. Epub 2022 Dec 2.

Abstract

Nanobionics-driven synthesis offers a process of designing and synthesizing functional materials on a nanoscale based on the structures and functions of biological systems. An approach such as this is environmentally friendly and sustainable, providing a viable option for synthesizing functional nanomaterials for catalysis and nanoelectronic components. In this work, we present a facile and green nanobionics approach to synthesize plasmonic HxMoO3 by interacting chloroplasts extracted from spinach with two-dimensional (2D) MoO3 nanoflakes. The generated plasmon resonances can be modulated in the visible wavelength ranges, and the efficiency to form the plasmonic materials is enhanced by 90% within 45 min of light excitation compared to reactions without chloroplast involvement. Such a characteristic is ascribed to the interfacial carrier dynamics between the two entities in the reactions, in which highly doped metal oxides with quasi-metallic properties can be formed to generate optical absorptions in the visible light region. The green synthesized plasmonic materials show high photocatalytic activities without the coupling of semiconductors, providing a promising nanoelectronics unit, based on the nanobionics-driven synthesized plasmonic materials.

Keywords: 2D materials; biosynthesis; nanobionics; photocatalysis; quasi-metallic; tunable plasmon resonance.