CO Oxidation Facilitated by Robust Surface States on Au-Covered Topological Insulators
Hua Chen, Wenguang Zhu, Di Xiao, Zhenyu Zhang

TL;DR
This study demonstrates that topologically protected surface states on 3D topological insulators can facilitate CO oxidation by acting as an electron bath, enhancing catalytic activity and offering new design principles for surface catalysis.
Contribution
It reveals that robust topological surface states can significantly improve catalytic processes by serving as an electron reservoir, a novel concept in surface catalysis research.
Findings
TSS remains intact with ultrathin Au films on Bi2Se3
TSS enhances adsorption energies of CO and O2
TSS promotes electron transfer for catalytic reactions
Abstract
Surface states refer to electronic states emerging as a solid material terminates at a surface, and can be present in many systems. Despite their spatial proximity to material surfaces, surface states have been largely overlooked in fundamental understanding of surface catalysis and potential real-world applications, because of their vulnerability to local impurities or defects. In contrast, the recently discovered three-dimensional topological insulators (3DTI) have exceptionally robust metallic surface states that are topologically protected against surface contamination and imperfection. The robust topological surface state(s) (TSS) provides a perfect platform for exploiting novel physical phenomena and potential applications of surface states in less stringent environments. Here we employ first-principles density functional theory to demonstrate that the TSS can play a vital and…
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