Room temperature bilayer water structures on a rutile TiO2(110) surface: hydrophobic or hydrophilic?

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Abstract

The lack of understanding of the molecular-scale water adsorbed on TiO2 surfaces under ambient conditions has become a major obstacle for solving the long-time scientific and applications issues, such as the photo-induced wetting phenomenon and designing novel advanced TiO2-based materials. Here, with the molecular dynamics simulation, we identified an ordered water bilayer structure with a two-dimensional hydrogen bonding network on a rutile TiO2(110) surface at ambient temperature, corroborated by vibrational sum-frequency generation spectroscopy. The reduced number of hydrogen bonds between the water bilayer and water droplet results in a notable water contact angle (25 ± 5°) of the pristine TiO2 surface. This surface hydrophobicity can be enhanced by the adsorption of the formate/acetate molecules, and diminishes with dissociated H2O molecules. Our new physical framework well explained the long-time controversy on the origin of the hydrophobicity/hydrophilicity of the TiO2 surface, thus help understanding the efficiency of TiO2 devices in producing electrical energy of solar cells and the photo-oxidation of organic pollutants.

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Qu, M., Huang, G., Liu, X., Nie, X., Qi, C., Wang, H., … Wang, C. (2022). Room temperature bilayer water structures on a rutile TiO2(110) surface: hydrophobic or hydrophilic? Chemical Science, 13(35), 10546–10554. https://doi.org/10.1039/d2sc02047e

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