Adsorption Study of a Water Molecule on Vacancy-Defected Nonpolar CdS Surfaces
Files
Publication date
2017-04-20
Editors
Advisors
Supervisors
Document Type
Article
Metadata
Show full item recordCollections
License
Abstract
A detailed understanding of the water−semiconductor interface is of major importance for elucidating the molecular interactions at the photocatalyst’s surface. Here, we studied the effect of vacancy defects on the adsorption of a water molecule on the (101̅0) and (112̅0) CdS surfaces, using spin-polarized density functional theory. We observed that the local spin polarization did not persist for most of the cationic vacancies on the surfaces, unlike in bulk, owing to surface reconstructions caused by displaced S atoms. This result suggests that cationic vacancies on these surfaces may not be the leading cause of the experimentally observed magnetism in CdS nanostructures. The surface vacancies are predominantly nonmagnetic except for one case, where a magnetic cationic vacancy is relatively stable due to constraints posed by the (101̅0) surface geometry. At this particular magnetic defect site, we found a very strong interaction with the H2O molecule leading to a case of chemisorption, where the local spin polarization vanishes concurrently. At the same defect site, adsorption of an O2 molecule was also simulated, and the results were found to be consistent with experimental electron paramagnetic resonance findings for powdered CdS. The anion vacancies on these surfaces were always found to be nonmagnetic and did not affect the water adsorption at these surfaces.
Keywords
Citation
Gupta, S & van Huis, M A 2017, 'Adsorption Study of a Water Molecule on Vacancy-Defected Nonpolar CdS Surfaces', Journal of Physical Chemistry C, vol. 121, pp. 9815−9824. https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.jpcc.6b13010