AI Article Synopsis

  • - Oxyhydrides of rare-earth metals (REMOHs), especially yttrium oxyhydride (YHO), show promising photochromic properties and rapid color changes, making them ideal for self-cleaning windows.
  • - The study delves into gadolinium oxyhydride (GdHO), exploring its electronic and structural features, with findings highlighting its potential for photocatalytic applications, particularly in degrading substances like methylene blue.
  • - The research also identifies GdHO's work function changes with deposition pressure and UV exposure, emphasizing its stability and recyclability, indicating significant implications for electronics and environmental remediation.

Article Abstract

Oxyhydrides of rare-earth metals (REMOHs) exhibit notable photochromic behaviors. Among these, yttrium oxyhydride (YHO) stands out for its impressive transparency and swift UV-responsive color change, positioning it as an optimal material for self-cleaning window applications. Although semiconductor photocatalysis holds potential solutions for critical environmental issues, optimizing the photocatalytic efficacy of photochromic substances has not been adequately addressed. This research advances the study of REMOHs, focusing on the properties of gadolinium oxyhydride (GdHO) both theoretically and experimentally. The electronic and structural characteristics of GdHO, vital for ceramic technology, are thoroughly examined. Explicitly determined work functions for GdH, GdHO, and GdO stand at 3.4 eV, 3.0 eV, and 4.3 eV, respectively. Bader charge analysis showcases GdHO's intricate bonding attributes, whereas its electron localization function majorly presents an ionic nature. The charge neutrality level is situated about 0.33 eV below the top valence band, highlighting these materials' inclination for acceptor-dominant electrical conductivity. Remarkably, this research unveils GdHO films' photocatalytic capabilities for the first time. Even with their restricted surface due to thinness, these films follow the Langmuir-Hinshelwood degradation kinetics, ensuring total degradation of methylene blue in a day. It was observed that GdHO's work function diminishes with reduced deposition pressure, and UV exposure further decreases it by 0.2 eV-a change that reverts post-UV exposure. The persistent stability of GdHO films, hinting at feasible recyclability, enhances their potential efficiency, underlining their viability in practical applications. Overall, this study accentuates GdHO's pivotal role in electronics and photocatalysis, representing a landmark advancement in the domain.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10745946PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/nano13243093DOI Listing

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Article Synopsis
  • - Oxyhydrides of rare-earth metals (REMOHs), especially yttrium oxyhydride (YHO), show promising photochromic properties and rapid color changes, making them ideal for self-cleaning windows.
  • - The study delves into gadolinium oxyhydride (GdHO), exploring its electronic and structural features, with findings highlighting its potential for photocatalytic applications, particularly in degrading substances like methylene blue.
  • - The research also identifies GdHO's work function changes with deposition pressure and UV exposure, emphasizing its stability and recyclability, indicating significant implications for electronics and environmental remediation.
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We report preferential orientation control in photochromic gadolinium oxyhydride (GdHO) thin films deposited by a two-step process. Gadolinium hydride (GdH) films were grown by reactive magnetron sputtering, followed by oxidation in air. The preferential orientation, grain size, anion concentrations and photochromic response of the films were strongly dependent on the deposition pressure.

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