Nanostructured oxide semiconductors are widely used in energy conversion, catalysis, sensing and environmental applications, due to their high stability, commercial availability, efficiency and low cost. Despite its crucial importance for the design of more efficient materials, the interplay between intrinsic and extrinsic defects is yet to be clarified. For example, oxygen vacancies (VO’s) can be either beneficial or detrimental to the desired performances, depending on a variety of factors. Here, we synthesize TiO2-x samples by the addition of three different N chemical sources (NH3, triethylamine, urea). X-ray absorption spectroscopy, confocal microscopy, UV–vis absorbance and fluorescence, are employed to explore the occurrence and location of VO’s both in real and energy spaces. High–grade bulk DFT simulations complement the experimental picture. Synergy between theory and experiment, on the one hand, estimates the relative VO’s content in the different samples from local structural information. On the other hand, a sharp optical transition at ~2.7 eV serves an unequivocal spectral signature of VO’s, allowing a semi-quantitative analysis by confocal microscopy. Fluorescence quenching of this feature is observed to a different degree in each sample under UV pumping and is attributed to the reaction of surface defects with atmospheric O2. Thus, we demonstrate that confocal microscopy can discriminate surface-localized VO’s if coupled with the detection of O2–induced fluorescence quenching. Concurrently, UV-induced photochromism and visible light photodegradation shed light on the most effective reactive defects. Eventually, surface-localized oxygen vacancies are predominant where actual N substitutional doping occurs, leading to materials exhibiting visible-light activity and characteristic photochromic behaviour. Implications on strategies for concomitant VO engineering and extrinsic doping are discussed.

Oxygen Vacancies in the Spotlight: On the Engineering of Intrinsic Defects in Highly Defective Tio2 Photocatalysts / D. Meroni, C. Cionti, L. Silvestrini, N. Gal, M. Cazzaniga, M. Ceotto, G. Buccella, L. LO PRESTI, G. Cappelletti. - (2023 Mar 21). [10.2139/ssrn.4395677]

Oxygen Vacancies in the Spotlight: On the Engineering of Intrinsic Defects in Highly Defective Tio2 Photocatalysts

D. Meroni
Primo
Formal Analysis
;
C. Cionti
Secondo
Investigation
;
M. Cazzaniga
Investigation
;
M. Ceotto
Investigation
;
L. LO PRESTI
Penultimo
Supervision
;
G. Cappelletti
Ultimo
Membro del Collaboration Group
2023

Abstract

Nanostructured oxide semiconductors are widely used in energy conversion, catalysis, sensing and environmental applications, due to their high stability, commercial availability, efficiency and low cost. Despite its crucial importance for the design of more efficient materials, the interplay between intrinsic and extrinsic defects is yet to be clarified. For example, oxygen vacancies (VO’s) can be either beneficial or detrimental to the desired performances, depending on a variety of factors. Here, we synthesize TiO2-x samples by the addition of three different N chemical sources (NH3, triethylamine, urea). X-ray absorption spectroscopy, confocal microscopy, UV–vis absorbance and fluorescence, are employed to explore the occurrence and location of VO’s both in real and energy spaces. High–grade bulk DFT simulations complement the experimental picture. Synergy between theory and experiment, on the one hand, estimates the relative VO’s content in the different samples from local structural information. On the other hand, a sharp optical transition at ~2.7 eV serves an unequivocal spectral signature of VO’s, allowing a semi-quantitative analysis by confocal microscopy. Fluorescence quenching of this feature is observed to a different degree in each sample under UV pumping and is attributed to the reaction of surface defects with atmospheric O2. Thus, we demonstrate that confocal microscopy can discriminate surface-localized VO’s if coupled with the detection of O2–induced fluorescence quenching. Concurrently, UV-induced photochromism and visible light photodegradation shed light on the most effective reactive defects. Eventually, surface-localized oxygen vacancies are predominant where actual N substitutional doping occurs, leading to materials exhibiting visible-light activity and characteristic photochromic behaviour. Implications on strategies for concomitant VO engineering and extrinsic doping are discussed.
Titania; oxygen vacancies; DFT calculations; N-doping; luminescence; photocatalysis
Settore CHIM/02 - Chimica Fisica
Settore CHIM/03 - Chimica Generale e Inorganica
21-mar-2023
https://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=4395677
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/2434/970877
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