A Model System for Photocatalysis: Ti-Doped α-Fe2O3(11̅02) Single-Crystalline Films
Author(s) -
Giada Franceschi,
Florian Kraushofer,
Matthias Meier,
Gareth S. Parkinson,
Michael Schmid,
Ulrike Diebold,
Michele Riva
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
chemistry of materials
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 3.741
H-Index - 375
eISSN - 1520-5002
pISSN - 0897-4756
DOI - 10.1021/acs.chemmater.9b04908
Subject(s) - materials science , doping , hematite , pulsed laser deposition , conductivity , water splitting , nanotechnology , density functional theory , impurity , scanning tunneling microscope , chemical engineering , photocatalysis , chemical physics , thin film , optoelectronics , chemistry , computational chemistry , catalysis , metallurgy , biochemistry , organic chemistry , engineering
Hematite (α-Fe 2 O 3 ) is one of the most investigated anode materials for photoelectrochemical water splitting. Its efficiency improves by doping with Ti, but the underlying mechanisms are not understood. One hurdle is separating the influence of doping on conductivity, surface states, and morphology, which all affect performance. To address this complexity, one needs well-defined model systems. We build such a model system by growing single-crystalline, atomically flat Ti-doped α-Fe 2 O 3 (11̅02) films by pulsed laser deposition (PLD). We characterize their surfaces, combining in situ scanning tunneling microscopy (STM) with density functional theory (DFT), and reveal how dilute Ti impurities modify the atomic-scale structure of the surface as a function of the oxygen chemical potential and Ti content. Ti preferentially substitutes subsurface Fe and causes a local restructuring of the topmost surface layers. Based on the experimental quantification of Ti-induced surface modifications and the structural model we have established, we propose a strategy that can be used to separate the effects of Ti-induced modifications to the surface atomic and electronic structures and bulk conductivity on the reactivity of Ti-doped hematite.
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