This review summarizes progress in understanding electron transfer from photoexcited nanocrystals to redox enzymes. The combination of the light-harvesting properties of nanocrystals and the catalytic properties of redox enzymes has emerged as a versatile platform to drive a variety of enzyme-catalyzed reactions with light. Transfer of a photoexcited charge from a nanocrystal to an enzyme is a critical first step for these reactions. This process has been studied in depth in systems that combine Cd-chalcogenide nanocrystals with hydrogenases. The two components can be assembled in close proximity to enable direct interfacial electron transfer or integrated with redox mediators to transport charges. Time-resolved spectroscopy and kinetic modeling have been used to measure the rates and efficiencies of the electron transfer. Electron transfer has been described within the framework of Marcus theory, providing insights into the factors that can be used to control the photochemical activity of these biohybrid systems. The range of potential applications and reactions that can be achieved using nanocrystal–enzyme systems is expanding, and numerous fundamental and practical questions remain to be addressed.
The generation of reduced semiconductor nanocrystals is of interest for a variety of optoelectronic applications. In comparison to other nanocrystalline materials, little work has been reported on reduction of CdS nanocrystals, which are particularly interesting for solar photochemistry applications. Most nanocrystal reduction strategies require electron donors that reduce ground state or photoexcited nanocrystals. In this work, we report the discovery of photocharging of CdS nanocrystals under continuous wave illumination with no added reductants. The long-lived reduced states form under illumination, saturate at high concentrations, and recover over time scales of minutes when illumination stops. This process occurs in CdS nanocrystals of different sizes, morphologies, organic surface capping ligands, and multiple solvents but not in CdSe nanocrystals. We propose a charging mechanism in which the photoexcited holes oxidize surface-capping ligands, which then dissociate from the nanocrystal surface. We contrast this ligand-mediated process with solvent-mediated photoreduction that occurs in CdS nanocrystals with polar ligands, which requires hole scavengers.
Combining the remarkable catalytic properties of redox enzymes with highly tunable light absorbing properties of semiconductor nanocrystals enables the light-driven catalysis of complex, multielectron redox reactions. This Article focuses on systems that combine CdS nanorods (NRs) with the MoFe protein of nitrogenase to drive photochemical N2 reduction. We used transient absorption spectroscopy (TAS) to examine the kinetics of electron transfer (ET) from CdS NRs to the MoFe protein. For CdS NRs with dimensions similar to those previously used for photochemical N2 reduction, the rate constant for ET from CdS NRs competes with other electron relaxation processes, such that when a MoFe protein is bound to a NR, about one-half of the photoexcited electrons are delivered to the enzyme. The NR–MoFe protein binding is incomplete with more than one-half of the NRs in solution not having a MoFe protein bound to accept electrons. The quantum efficiency of ET (QEET) in these ensemble samples is similar to previously reported efficiencies of product (NH3 and H2) formation, suggesting that the enzyme utilizes the delivered electrons without major loss pathways. Our analysis suggests that QEET, and therefore the photochemical product formation, is limited at the ensemble level by the NR–MoFe protein binding and at the single-complex level by the competitiveness of ET. We characterized ET kinetics for several CdS NRs samples with varying dimensions and found that for CdS NRs with an average diameter of 4.2 nm the ET efficiency dropped to undetectable levels, defining a maximum NR diameter that should be used to photochemically drive the MoFe protein. The work described here provides insights into the design of systems with increased control of photochemical N2 reduction catalyzed by the MoFe protein of nitrogenase.
The [8Fe-7S] P-cluster of nitrogenase MoFe protein mediates electron transfer from nitrogenase Fe protein during the catalytic production of ammonia. The P-cluster transitions between three oxidation states, PN, P+, P2+ of which PN↔P+ is critical to electron exchange in the nitrogenase complex during turnover. To dissect the steps in formation of P+ during electron transfer, photochemical reduction of MoFe protein at 231–263 K was used to trap formation of P+ intermediates for analysis by EPR. In complexes with CdS nanocrystals, illumination of MoFe protein led to reduction of the P-cluster P2+ that was coincident with formation of three distinct EPR signals: S = 1/2 axial and rhombic signals, and a high-spin S = 7/2 signal. Under dark annealing the axial and high-spin signal intensities declined, which coincided with an increase in the rhombic signal intensity. A fit of the time-dependent changes of the axial and high-spin signals to a reaction model demonstrates they are intermediates in the formation of the P-cluster P+ resting state and defines how spin-state transitions are coupled to changes in P-cluster oxidation state in MoFe protein during electron transfer.
Many ternary and quaternary semiconductors have been made in nanocrystalline forms for a variety of applications, but we have little understanding of how well their ensemble properties reflect the properties of individual nanocrystals. We examine electronic structure heterogeneities in nanocrystals of (Ga1–x Zn x )(N1–x O x ), a semiconductor that splits water under visible illumination. We use valence electron energy loss spectroscopy (VEELS) in a scanning transmission electron microscope to map out electronic spectra of (Ga1–x Zn x )(N1–x O x ) nanocrystals with a spatial resolution of 8 nm. We examine three samples with varying degrees of intraparticle and interparticle compositional heterogeneity and ensemble optical spectra that range from a single band gap in the visible to two band gaps, one in the visible and one in the UV. The VEELS spectra resemble the ensemble absorption spectra for a sample with a homogeneous elemental distribution and a single band gap and, more interestingly, one with intraparticle compositional heterogeneity and two band gaps. We observe spatial variation in VEELS spectra only with significant interparticle compositional heterogeneity. Hence, we reveal the conditions under which the ensemble spectra reveal the optical properties of individual (Ga1–x Zn x )(N1–x O x ) particles. More broadly, we illustrate how VEELS can be used to probe electronic heterogeneities in compositionally complex nanoscale semiconductors.
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