Donor defects and small polarons on the TiO2(110) surface
Journal of Applied Physics 119(18)
Article 2016 English
Authors
PM
Poul Georg Moses
AJ
Anderson Janotti
CF
Cesare Franchini
Abstract
1 min read
The role of defects in the chemical activity of the rutile TiO2(110) surface remains a rich topic of research, despite the rutile (110) being one of the most studied surfaces of transition-metal oxides. Here, we present results from hybrid functional calculations that reconcile apparently disparate views on the impact of donor defects, such as oxygen vacancies and hydrogen impurities, on the electronic structure of the (110) rutile surface. We find that the bridging oxygen vacancy and adsorbed or substitutional hydrogen are actually shallow donors, which do not induce gap states. The excess electrons from these donor centers tend to localize in the form of small polarons, which are the factual cause of the deep states ∼1 eV below the conduction band, often observed in photoelectron spectroscopy measurements. Our results offer a new framework for understanding the surface electronic structure of TiO2 and related oxides.
Yelin Hu, Florent Boudoire, Iris Hermann-Geppert, Peter Bogdanoff, George Tsekouras, Bongjin Simon Mun, Giuseppino Fortunato, Michael Graetzel, Artur Braun
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