“…In the ever-expanding family of plasmon-driven photoreactions, the reductive coupling of para -nitrothiophenol (pNTP) has become a model reaction ideal for detailed mechanistic studies of plasmon-mediated surface chemistry. − Plasmon-enhanced Raman spectroscopies, including both surface-enhanced Raman scattering (SERS) and tip-enhanced Raman scattering (TERS), have been utilized as surface-sensitive spectroscopic tools to precisely characterize the detailed structural evolution of molecular adsorbates during plasmon-driven photocatalytic reactions. − As revealed by SERS- and TERS-based spectroscopic studies, chemisorbed pNTP molecules undergo plasmon-driven reductive coupling reactions to produce p , p ′-dimercaptoazobenzene (DMAB) on the surfaces of a diverse range of metallic nanostructures, − ,− providing a paradigm-shifting strategy for synthesizing aromatic azo compounds. However, the kinetic features and reaction pathways vary substantially from case to case, depending sensitively on the intrinsic properties of the metallic nanocatalysts (materials compositions, plasmon resonance frequencies, local-field enhancements, and surface structures), the photoexcitation conditions (excitation wavelength, excitation power density, and light illumination geometry), and the local environment in which the reactions occur (local temperature, pH, and presence of charge carrier acceptors).…”