Elucidating the barriers on direct water splitting: Key role of oxygen vacancy density and coordination over PbTiO$_3$ and TiO$_2$
Ersen Mete, \c{S}inasi Ellialt{\i}o\u{g}lu, Oguz Gulseren, Deniz Uner

TL;DR
This study uses first-principles calculations to identify how oxygen vacancy density and coordination influence the efficiency of direct water splitting on PbTiO$_3$ and TiO$_2$ surfaces, revealing key barriers to hydrogen production.
Contribution
It provides a detailed atomic-level understanding of how oxygen vacancies affect water splitting on these surfaces, highlighting the importance of vacancy configuration and surface termination.
Findings
Two neighboring oxygen vacancies are essential for water adsorption.
Formation of molecular hydrogen is more favorable on PbO-terminated PbTiO$_3$ surfaces.
Multiple barriers, including entropic and enthalpic, hinder efficient water splitting.
Abstract
In this work, using the state-of-the-art first principles calculations based on density functional theory, we found that the concentration as well as coordination of surface oxygen vacancies with respect to each other were critical for direct water-splitting reaction on the (001) surfaces of PbTiO and TiO. For the water-splitting reaction to happen on TiO-terminated surfaces, it is necessary to have two neighboring O-vacancies acting as active sites that host two adsorbing water molecules. However, eventual dissociation of O-H bonds is possible only in the presence of an additional nearest-neighbor O-vacancy. Unfortunately, this necessary third vacancy inhibits the formation of molecular hydrogen by trapping the dissociated H atoms over TiO-teminated surfaces. Formation of up to 3 O-vacancies, is energetically less costly on both terminations of PbTiO (001) surfaces…
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Taxonomy
TopicsElectronic and Structural Properties of Oxides · Catalytic Processes in Materials Science · Gas Sensing Nanomaterials and Sensors
