The presence of oxygen vacancy sites fundamentally affects physical and chemical properties of materials. In this study, a dipole-containing interaction between poly(diallyldimethylammonium chloride) PDDA and α-MoO is found to enable high-concentrations of surface oxygen vacancies. Thermal annealing under Ar resulted in negligible reduction of MoO to MoO with x = 0.03 at 600 °C. In contrast, we show that the thermochemical reaction with PDDA polyelectrolyte under Ar can significantly reduce MoO to MoO with x = 0.36 (MoO) at 600 °C. Thermal annealing under H gas enhanced the substoichiometry of MoO from x = 0.62 to 0.98 by using PDDA at the same conditions. Density functional theory calculations, supported by experimental analysis, suggest that the vacancy sites are created through absorption of terminal site oxygen (O) upon decomposition of the N-C bond in the pentagonal ring of PDDA during the thermal treatment. O atoms are absorbed as ionic O and neutral O, creating Mo-v and Mo-v vacancy bipolarons and polarons, respectively. X-ray photoemission spectroscopy peak analysis indicates the ratio of charged to neutral molybdenum ions in the PDDA-processed samples increased from Mo/Mo = 1.0 and Mo/Mo = 3.3 when reduced at 400 °C to Mo/Mo = 3.7 and Mo/Mo = 2.6 when reduced at 600 °C. This is consistent with our ab initio calculation where the Mo-v formation energy is 0.22 eV higher than that for Mo-v in the bulk of the material and 0.02 eV higher on the surface. This study reveals a new paradigm for effective enhancement of surface oxygen vacancy concentrations essential for a variety of technologies including advanced energy conversion applications such as electrochemical energy storage, catalysis, and low-temperature thermochemical water splitting.
Download full-text PDF |
Source |
---|---|
http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acs.langmuir.8b00539 | DOI Listing |
Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!