Department Of Chemistry

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    DNA Origami-Templated Bimetallic Core-Shell Nanostructures for Enhanced Oxygen Evolution Reaction
    (American Chemical Society, 2022-04-15T00:00:00) Kaur, Gagandeep; Biswas, Rathindranath; Haldar, Krishna Kanta; Sen, Tapasi
    Hydrogen generation through electrocatalytic water splitting offers promising technology for sustainable and clean energy production as an alternative to conventional energy sources. The development of highly active electrocatalysts is of immense interest for improving the efficiency of gas evolution, which is strongly hindered due to the sluggish kinetics of oxygen evolution reaction (OER). Herein, we present the design of Ag-coated Au nanostar (core-shell-type Au@Ag nanostar) monomer structures assembled on rectangular DNA origami and study their electrocatalytic activities through OER, which remains unexplored. Our designed DNA origami-templated bimetallic nanostar catalyst showed excellent OER activity and high stability without using any external binder and exhibited a current density of 10 mA cm-2at a low overpotential of 266 mV, which was smaller than those of ss-DNA-functionalized Au@Ag nanostars and DNA origami-templated pure Au nanostars. Our results reveal that DNA origami-assembled core-shell Au@Ag nanostars show better electrocatalytic performance as compared to pure-core Au nanostars immobilized on DNA origami, owing to the presence of a highly conductive Ag layer. Such controlled assembly of bimetallic nanostructures on a DNA origami template can provide additional electrochemical surface area and a higher density of active sites resulting in enhanced electrocatalysis. � 2022 American Chemical Society. All rights reserved.
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    Interfacial design of gold/silver core-shell nanostars for plasmon-enhanced photocatalytic coupling of 4-aminothiophenol
    (Royal Society of Chemistry, 2021-10-02T00:00:00) Kaur, Gagandeep; Tanwar, Swati; Kaur, Vishaldeep; Biswas, Rathindranath; Saini, Sangeeta; Haldar, Krishna Kanta; Sen, Tapasi
    Chemical reactions under mild conditions mediated by localized surface plasmon resonance (LSPR) of metals have emerged as a functional research field. In the present study, we report an interfacial designing procedure for the fabrication of a class of bimetallic hybrid nanomaterials as a profoundly active photocatalyst for the conversion of para-aminothiophenol (PATP) into 4,4?-dimercaptoazobenzene. For this purpose, core-shell nanostars composed of gold (core) and silver (shell) (Au/Ag NSs) were utilized as both surface-enhanced Raman scattering substrate and plasmon driven catalyst under 532 nm laser excitation. Au/Ag NSs with sharp tips display excellent surface-enhanced Raman scattering (SERS) efficiency of PATP. Employing the SERS study, it has been found that PATP rapidly converts into its dimerized product DMAB within few seconds by surface photochemical reaction in the Au-Ag heterojunction of core-shell nanostars. Au/Ag NSs with multiple sharp tips exhibit intense LSPR and highly strong electric fields are created at the tips, which enables the generation of hot electrons responsible for the rapid conversion reaction. Such well-designed interfacial bimetallic nanostars could have potential applications in surface enhanced spectroscopy, biosensing, and photoinduced surface catalysis. This journal is � The Royal Society of Chemistry.