Room-temperature oxygen sensing is realized from individual ZnS nanobelts. Under UV illumination the current through ZnS nanobelt increases from 0.265to2.26nA as the oxygen pressure decreases from 1×105to3×10−3Pa. The conductance of ZnS nanobelt exhibits a logarithmic dependence on oxygen pressure, which is in agreement with theoretical prediction. The sensing is based on the enhanced modulation of ZnS nanobelts conductance by adsorbed oxygen under illumination. These results demonstrate an approach to in situ precisely detect oxygen at room temperature.
Converting
renewable solar energy into fuel and value-added chemicals
is a long-term objective of researchers and a promising solution for
the energy crisis, environmental pollution, and global warming. Photosynthetic
biohybrid systems (PBS) are receiving more and more attention, because
they take advantage of both artificial semiconductor materials (high
solar conversion efficiency) and living cells (high product selectivity)
and, hence, enable the efficient capture and storage of solar energy
in chemical bonds. In this perspective, we summarize findings on whole
cell–semiconductor nanomaterial hybrid systems regarding solar
driven H2 evolution, CO2 reduction, and N2 fixation in the past years. First, hydrogen yield and duration
of different H2 evolution PBS are compared, and various
assembly modes and electron transfer pathways are also introduced.
Then, we evaluate the performance of CO2 reduction PBS
based on the type of multicarbon products, as well as the challenges
encountered by researchers and corresponding tentative solutions.
Finally, we focus on photobiocatalytic N2 fixation, while
introducing diverse N2 fixing microorganisms. Overall,
obvious achievements have been made in photobiocatalytic solar fuel
and solar chemical conversion in recent years, as innovative PBSs
are constructed, molecular mechanisms are explored, and tentative
solutions are proposed for scale-up, but huge challenges still exist.
In the future, we should focus on revealing the interfacial electron
transfer mechanisms and cellular energy allocation in order to significantly
promote the solar-to-chemical conversion efficiency and meet the practical
requirements.
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