Quantum dynamics origin of high photocatalytic activity of mixed-phase anatase/rutile TiO2

30Citations
Citations of this article
23Readers
Mendeley users who have this article in their library.
Get full text

Abstract

Mixed anatase/rutile TiO2 exhibits high photocatalytic activity; however, the mechanism underlying the high performance of the mixed phases is not fully understood. We have performed time-domain ab initio calculations to study the exited state dynamics in mixed phase TiO2 and to investigate the impact of an oxygen vacancy on the dynamics. The anatase(100)/rutile(001) heterostructures with and without an oxygen vacancy used in this work exhibit type II band alignment with the conduction band of rutile residing above that of anatase. The oxygen vacancy introduces a hole trap state inside the bandgap. Owing to a strong coupling between the donor and acceptor states, the electron and hole transfers across the anatase/rutile interface occur on an ultrafast 100 fs timescale in both systems. The decoupling of electron and hole favors a long-lived charge separated state. The electron-hole recombination across the pristine anatase/rutile interface takes 6.6 ns and is significantly slower than that in the pure anatase and rutile phases, showing good agreement with experiments. The electron transfer dynamics is independent of the oxygen vacancy, which has some influence on the hole transfer and a strong effect on carrier recombination. By creating a hole trap state, the vacancy accelerates carrier losses by over an order of magnitude. The fast charge separation and the long lifetime of the charge separated state rationalize the enhanced photocatalytic performance of mixed phase TiO2 compared to the pure phases.

Cite

CITATION STYLE

APA

Wei, Y., Tokina, M. V., Benderskii, A. V., Zhou, Z., Long, R., & Prezhdo, O. V. (2020). Quantum dynamics origin of high photocatalytic activity of mixed-phase anatase/rutile TiO2. Journal of Chemical Physics, 153(4). https://doi.org/10.1063/5.0014179

Register to see more suggestions

Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.

Already have an account?

Save time finding and organizing research with Mendeley

Sign up for free