Non-catalytic hydrogenation of VO2 in acid solution

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Abstract

Hydrogenation is an effective way to tune the property of metal oxides. It can conventionally be performed by doping hydrogen into solid materials with noble-metal catalysis, high-temperature/pressure annealing treatment, or high-energy proton implantation in vacuum condition. Acid solution naturally provides a rich proton source, but it should cause corrosion rather than hydrogenation to metal oxides. Here we report a facile approach to hydrogenate monoclinic vanadium dioxide (VO2) in acid solution at ambient condition by placing a small piece of low workfunction metal (Al, Cu, Ag, Zn, or Fe) on VO2 surface. It is found that the attachment of a tiny metal particle (~1.0 mm) can lead to the complete hydrogenation of an entire wafer-size VO2 (>2 inch). Moreover, with the right choice of the metal a two-step insulator-metal-insulator phase modulation can even be achieved. An electron-proton co-doping mechanism has been proposed and verified by the first-principles calculations.

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Chen, Y., Wang, Z., Chen, S., Ren, H., Wang, L., Zhang, G., … Luo, Y. (2018). Non-catalytic hydrogenation of VO2 in acid solution. Nature Communications, 9(1). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-018-03292-y

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