Journal of the American Chemical Society, volume 144, issue 30, pages 13565-13573
Hydrogen-Bond Network Promotes Water Splitting on the TiO2 Surface
Xiaochuan Ma
1
,
Yongliang Shi
2
,
Jianyi Liu
1
,
Xintong Li
1
,
Xuefeng Cui
1, 3
,
Shijing Tan
1, 3
,
Jin Zhao
1, 4
,
Bing Wang
1, 3
Publication type: Journal Article
Publication date: 2022-07-19
scimago Q1
SJR: 5.489
CiteScore: 24.4
Impact factor: 14.4
ISSN: 00027863, 15205126
PubMed ID:
35852138
General Chemistry
Catalysis
Biochemistry
Colloid and Surface Chemistry
Abstract
Breaking the strong covalent O-H bond of an isolated H2O molecule is difficult, but it can be largely facilitated when the H2O molecule is connected with others through hydrogen-bonding. How a hydrogen-bond network forms and performs becomes crucial for water splitting in natural photosynthesis and artificial photocatalysis and is awaiting a microscopic and spectroscopic understanding at the molecular level. At the prototypical photocatalytic H2O/anatase-TiO2(001)-(1×4) interface, we report the hydrogen-bond network can promote the coupled proton and hole transfer for water splitting. The formation of a hydrogen-bond network is controlled by precisely tuning the coverage of water to above one monolayer. Under ultraviolet (UV) light irradiation, the hydrogen-bond network opens a cascaded channel for the transfer of a photoexcited hole, concomitant with the release of the proton to form surface hydroxyl groups. The yielded hydroxyl groups provide excess electrons to the TiO2 surface, causing the reduction of Ti4+ to Ti3+ and leading to the emergence of gap states, as monitored by in situ UV/X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy. The density functional theory calculation reveals that the water splitting becomes an exothermic process through hole oxidation with the assistance of the hydrogen-bond network. In addition to the widely concerned exotic activity from photocatalysts, our study demonstrates the internal hydrogen-bond network, which is ubiquitous at practical aqueous/catalyst interfaces, is also indispensable for water splitting.
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