4.7 Article

One step towards bridging the materials gap:: surface studies of TiO2 anatase

Journal

CATALYSIS TODAY
Volume 85, Issue 2-4, Pages 93-100

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/S0920-5861(03)00378-X

Keywords

TiO2; surface studies; photocatalytic reactions; Scanning Tunneling Microscopy; single crystalline surfaces; surface reconstruction; adsorption

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We present a short overview of surface studies on the main low-index surfaces of anatase, the technologically most interesting crystallographic form of titanium dioxide. Results are compared to the extensively investigated surfaces of TiO2 rutile. The anatase (1 0 1) surface is stable in a (1 x 1) configuration. It exhibits twofold coordinated (bridging) oxygen atoms and fivefold coordinated Ti atoms with a density comparable to the one found on rutile (1 1 0). Step edges are terminated by fourfold coordinated Ti sites. In contrast to rutile (1 1 0), anatase (1 0 1) does not show a strong tendency for losing twofold coordinated oxygen atoms upon annealing in ultrahigh vacuum. The apparent lack of point defects is also reflected in the adsorption/desorption behavior of water and methanol. The anatase (1 0 0) surface has the second-lowest surface energy and tends to from a (I x 2) reconstruction. A model with (1 0 1)-oriented microfacets agrees with the observed features in atomically-resolved STM images. The (0 0 1) surface forms a (1 x 4) reconstruction that is well explained by an 'ad-molecule' model predicted from density functional theory calculations. A (1 x 3) reconstruction was observed for the anatase (1 0 3) surface. (C) 2003 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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