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Infrared spectroscopy study of adsorption and photodecomposition of formic acid on reduced and defective rutile TiO2 (110) surfaces

Mattsson, Andreas (author)
Uppsala universitet,Fasta tillståndets fysik
Hu, Shuang-Lin (author)
Uppsala universitet,Strukturkemi
Hermansson, Kersti (author)
Uppsala universitet,Strukturkemi
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Österlund, Lars (author)
Uppsala universitet,Fasta tillståndets fysik
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 (creator_code:org_t)
American Vacuum Society, 2014
2014
English.
In: Journal of Vacuum Science & Technology. A. Vacuum, Surfaces, and Films. - : American Vacuum Society. - 0734-2101 .- 1520-8559. ; 32:6
  • Journal article (peer-reviewed)
Abstract Subject headings
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  • Adsorption and photodecomposition of formic acid on rutile TiO2 (110) have been investigated with infrared reflection–absorption spectroscopy (IRRAS) employing p- and s-polarized light along the [001] and [ 11⎯⎯0 ] crystal directions. The single crystal surfaces were prepared either by sputtering and annealing in ultrahigh vacuum (UHV) to obtain a reduced surface (r-TiO2), or by sputtering without annealing to create a rough, highly defective surface (sp-TiO2). Results are compared with corresponding measurements on rutile nanocrystals performed in synthetic air. IRRAS spectra obtained on r-TiO2 and rutile nanocrystals are very similar, and show that in both cases formic acid dissociates and is predominately adsorbed as a bridging bidentate formate species, and that the formate adsorption structure on the nanocrystals is dominated by interactions with majority (110) surfaces. In contrast, the IRRAS spectra on sp-TiO2 are different, with only minor spectral features associated with (110) surfaces and lost azimuthal symmetry, both of which imply changed adsorption geometry due to bonding to low-coordinated Ti atoms with lower valences. The UV-induced rate of formate photodecomposition is about 30 times higher on rutile nanocrystals in synthetic air compared with sp-TiO2 under UHV conditions, and even larger than on r-TiO2. These differences are explained by the lack of oxygen and limited hydroxyl coverage under UHV conditions. The difference in reactivity between the r-TiO2 and sp-TiO2 surfaces is attributed to a high concentration of strongly bonded bridging bidentate formate species on the (110) surface, which lowers its reactivity. The results point to a pressure gap where the availability of molecular oxygen and the hydroxyl concentration limit the photoreactivity in UHV leading to an almost 20-fold decrease of the formate degradation rate in UHV. In contrast, the structure represented by the single crystal (110) surface is shown to capture the essential structural properties, which dictates the formic acid adsorption and adsorption structure of rutile nanocrystals.

Subject headings

NATURVETENSKAP  -- Fysik -- Den kondenserade materiens fysik (hsv//swe)
NATURAL SCIENCES  -- Physical Sciences -- Condensed Matter Physics (hsv//eng)

Keyword

Engineering Science with specialization in Solid State Physics
Teknisk fysik med inriktning mot fasta tillståndets fysik

Publication and Content Type

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