4.6 Article

Revealing the true impact of interstitial and substitutional nitrogen doping in TiO2 on photoelectrochemical applications

Journal

JOURNAL OF MATERIALS CHEMISTRY A
Volume 9, Issue 20, Pages 12214-12224

Publisher

ROYAL SOC CHEMISTRY
DOI: 10.1039/d0ta11494d

Keywords

-

Funding

  1. Brazilian agency: CNPq [24769/2018-2, 309454/2018-2, 307723/2018-6]
  2. Brazilian agency: CAPES-PRINT [001/2019-PROPG]
  3. Brazilian agency: FAPERGS [19/2551-0002287-5]
  4. FundacAo Carlos Chagas Filho de Amparo a Pesquisa do Estado do Rio de Janeiro (FAPERJ)
  5. University of Nottingham Beacons of Excellence: Propulsion Futures and EPSRC: LiPPS XPS system
  6. University of Nottingham Equipment Account [EP/K005138/1]
  7. EPSRC [EP/K005138/1] Funding Source: UKRI

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Nitrogen doping enhances visible light absorption of TiO2, but it may not necessarily improve photoelectrochemical (PEC) performance. The method and concentration of doping play a crucial role in determining the performance.
Application of photocatalysts that strongly absorb within the visible range is a common strategy to improve the efficiency of photoelectrochemical (PEC) systems; this may translate to high photocurrents, but it is not always the case. Here, we show that nitrogen doping enhances visible light absorption of TiO2; however, it does not necessarily result in improved PEC performance. Depending on the applied external potential, N-doping can improve, or degrade, PEC performance either under water oxidation conditions or via hole scavenging (Na2S/Na2SO3). In this work, we developed a holistic approach to evaluate the true impact of N doping in TiO2 on PEC performance. Interstitial and substitutional N doping are experimentally explored for the first time through a simple and novel PEC approach which complemented X-ray photoelectron analyses. Using this approach, we show that interstitial N doping of anatase TiO2 dominates up to 400 degrees C and substitutional doping up to ca. 600 degrees C, without rutile formation. This reveals that the bottleneck for doping higher N-concentrations in TiO2 is the direct transformation to thermodynamically favorable N-rich phases, such as TiN/Ti2N at 700 degrees C, inhibiting the formation of rutile phase. Transmission electron microscopy revealed that N doping proceeds mainly from the inner to the outer tube walls via nitridation and follows a preferential pathway from interstitial to substitutional doping. Direct PEC experimental evidence on visible light activation of N doped TiO2, and the location of interband states, showed acceptor levels of 1.0 eV for substitutional and 0.7 eV for interstitial doping above the TiO2 valence band maximum. In addition, due to O vacancies and Ti3+ species, donor levels below the conduction band minimum were also created. These levels act as trapping/recombination centers for charge carriers and, therefore, the gain in the visible range due to N doping does not translate to an improved PEC performance by these structural defects. Ultimately, we show that whilst there is a benefit of visible light absorption through N doping in TiO2, the PEC performance of the samples only surpasses pristine TiO2 at relatively high biasing (>0.3 V vs. Ag/AgCl).

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.6
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available