Pulsed Laser Ablation of Recycled Copper in Methanol: A new route toward sustainable plasmonic and catalytic nanostructures

Publication date: 1 Mar 2025

JournalSource: LEGACY

Copper Nanoparticles (NPs) are widely used for their versatility, specifically in plasmonic and catalysis. Now copper has become a critical raw material so an alternative must be found. In this work we compare the plasmonic and catalytic activity of Cu NPs produced by using an industrial ultrapure target and a Cu target obtained from a commercial wire. The technique used for the NPs production is the Pulsed Laser Ablation in Liquid with a 1064 nm nanosecond laser that allows to produce NPs directly from a bulk target without any treatment. Both kinds of NPs exhibit their plasmonic peak at around 600 nm, typically of Cu. Both kind of NPs exhibit the same catalytic activity, in terms of water splitting, as catalyst, in anode or cathode, with performance comparable with the state of the art.

Publisher
Elsevier
Origin
Applied Surface Science Advances
Legacy ID
61d12c3d3d796bb90823ee0045aeca60
Biblio references
Volume: 26 Pages: 100712