Direct Comparison of PdAu Alloy Thin Films and Nanoparticles upon Hydrogen Exposure
Journal article, 2019

Nanostructured metal hydrides are able to efficiently detect hydrogen in optical sensors. In the literature, two nanostructured systems based on metal hydrides have been proposed for this purpose each with its own detection principle: continuous sub-100 nm thin films read out via optical reflectance/transmittance changes and nanoparticle arrays for which the detection relies on localized surface plasmon resonance. Despite their apparent similarities, their optical and structural response to hydrogen has never been directly compared. In response, for the case of Pd 1-y Au y (y = 0.15-0.30) alloys, we directly compare these two systems and establish that they are distinctively different. We show that the dissimilar optical response is not caused by the different optical readout principles but results from a fundamentally different structural response to hydrogen due to the different nanostructurings. The measurements empirically suggest that these differences cannot be fully accounted by surface effects but that the nature of the film-substrate interaction plays an important role and affects both the hydrogen solubility and the metal-to-metal hydride transition. In a broader perspective, our results establish that the specifics of nanoconfinement dictate the structural properties of metal hydrides, which in turn control the properties of nanostructured devices including the sensing characteristics of optical hydrogen sensors and hydride-based active plasmonic systems.

optical hydrogen sensing

plasmonics

nanoparticles

thin films

nanostructuring

metal hydride

X-ray diffraction

PdAu

Author

Lars J. Bannenberg

Delft University of Technology

Ferry Nugroho

Chalmers, Physics, Chemical Physics

Herman Schreuders

Delft University of Technology

Ben Norder

Delft University of Technology

Thu Trang Trinh

Helmholtz

Nina Juliane Steinke

STFC Rutherford Appleton Laboratory

Ad A. Van Well

Delft University of Technology

Christoph Langhammer

Chalmers, Physics, Chemical Physics

B. Dam

Delft University of Technology

ACS Applied Materials & Interfaces

1944-8244 (ISSN) 1944-8252 (eISSN)

Vol. 11 17 15489-15497

Subject Categories

Other Physics Topics

Other Chemistry Topics

Condensed Matter Physics

DOI

10.1021/acsami.8b22455

PubMed

30964257

More information

Latest update

6/13/2022