4.6 Article

Reduced and n-Type Doped TiO2: Nature of Ti3+ Species

Journal

JOURNAL OF PHYSICAL CHEMISTRY C
Volume 113, Issue 48, Pages 20543-20552

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/jp9061797

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Funding

  1. U.S. Department of Energy [DE-FG02-05ER15702]

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Defect states in reduced and n-type doped titania are of fundamental importance in several technologically important applications. Still, the exact nature of these states, often referred to as Ti3+ centers, is largely unclear and a matter of debate. The problem is complicated by the fact that electronic structure calculations based on density functional theory (DFT) in the local density approximation (LDA) or semilocal generalized gradient approximation (GGA) provide results that do not account for many of the experimentally observed fingerprints of the formation of Ti3+ centers in reduced TiO2. Here, we investigate the properties of at least four different types of Ti3+ centers in bulk anatase, (1) 6-fold-coordinated Ti-6c(3+) ions introduced by F- or Nb-doping, (2) Ti-6c(3+)-OH species associated with H-doping, (3) undercoordinated Ti-5c(3+) species associated with oxygen vacancies, and (4) interstitial Ti-5c(3+) species. The characterization of these different kinds of Ti3+ centers is based on DFr+U and/or hybrid functional calculations, which are known to (partially) correct the self-interaction error of local and semilocal DFr functionals. We found that strongly localized solutions where an excess electron is on a single Ti3+ ion are very close in energy and sometimes degenerate with partly or highly delocalizcd Solutions where the extra charge is distributed over several Ti ions. The defect states corresponding to these different Solutions lie at different energies in the band gap of the material. This has important implications for the conductivity mechanism in reduced or n-type doped titania and suggests a significant role of' temperature in determining the degree of localization of the trapped charge.

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