Heterostructures of gold-nanoparticle-decorated reduced-graphene-oxide (rGO)-wrapped ZnO hollow spheres (Au/rGO/ZnO) are synthesized using tetra-n-butylammonium bromide as a mediating agent. The structure of amorphous ZnO hollow spheres is found to be transformed from nanosheet- to nanoparticle-assembled hollow spheres (nPAHS) upon annealing at 500 °C. The ZnO nPAHS hybrids with Au/rGO are characterized using various techniques, including photoluminescence, steady-state absorbance, time-resolved photoluminescence, and photocatalysis. The charge-transfer time of ZnO nPAHS is found to be 87 ps, which is much shorter than that of a nanorod (128 ps), nanoparticle (150 ps), and nanowall (990 ps) due to its unique structure. The Au/rGO/ZnO hybrid shows a higher charge-transfer efficiency of 68.0% in comparison with rGO/ZnO (40.3%) and previously reported ZnO hybrids. The photocatalytic activities of the samples are evaluated by photodegrading methylene blue under black-light irradiation. The Au/rGO/ZnO exhibits excellent photocatalytic efficiency due to reduced electron-hole recombination, fast electron-transfer rate, and high charge-transfer efficiency.
We report the effective methods to induce weak ferromagnetism in pristine MoS2 persisting up to room temperature with the improved transport property, which would lead to new spintronics devices. The hydrogenation of MoS2 by heating at 300 °C for 1 h leads to the easy axis out of plane, while the irradiation of proton with a dose of 1 × 10(13) P/cm(2) leads to the easy axis in plane. The theoretical modeling supports such magnetic easy axes.
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