A theoretical analysis of small Pt particles on rutile TiO2(110) surfaces
Abstract
The adsorption profiles and electronic structures of Ptn (n = 1--4) clusters on stoichiometric, reduced and reconstructed rutile TiO2(110) surfaces were systematically studied using on site d-d Coulomb interaction corrected hybrid density functional theory calculations. The atomic structure of small Pt cluster adsorbates mainly depend on the stoichiometry of the corresponding titania support. The cluster shapes on the bulk terminated ideal surface look like their gas phase low energy structures. However, for instance, they get significantly distorted on the reduced surfaces with increasing oxygen vacancies. On non-stoichiometric surfaces, Pt--Ti coordination becomes dominant in the determination of the adsorption geometries. The electronic structure of Ptn/TiO2(110) systems can not be correctly described by pure DFT methods, particularly for non-stoichiometric cases, due to the inappropriate treatment of the correlation for d electrons. We performed DFT+U calculations to give a reasonable description of the reconstructed rutile (110) surface. Pt clusters induce local surface relaxations that influence band edges of titania support, and bring a number of band-gap states depending on the cluster size. Significant band gap narrowing occurs upon Ptn--surface interaction due to adsorbate driven states on the bulk terminated and reduced surfaces. On the other hand, they give rise to a band gap widening associated to partial reoxidation of the reconstructed surface. No metallization arises even for Pt4 on rutile.
Turn this paper into a lesson
ArcXiv compiles a structured reading guide from this paper's metadata: plain-English importance, contributions, prerequisite concepts, which sections to read first, flashcards, and a quiz. Grounded in the abstract, never invented.