May 13, 2017
Journal Article

Electron Mobility and Trapping in Ferrihydrite Nanoparticles

Abstract

Iron is the most abundant transition metal in the Earth's crust, and naturally occurring iron oxide minerals play a commanding role in environmental redox reactions. Although iron oxide redox reactions are well studied, their precise mechanisms are not fully understood. Recent work has shown that these involve electron transfer pathways within the solid, suggesting that overall reaction rates could be dependent on electron mobility. Initial ultrafast spectroscopy studies of iron oxide nanoparticles sensitized by fluorescein derivatives supported a model for electron mobility based on polaronic hopping of electron charge carriers between iron sites, but the constitutive relationships between hopping mobilities and interfacial charge transfer processes has remained obscured. We developed a coarse-grained lattice Monte Carlo model to simulate the collective mobilities and lifetimes of these photoinjected electrons with respect to recombination with adsorbed dye molecules for the essential nanophase ferrihydrite, and tested predictions made by the simulations using pump-probe spectroscopy. We acquired optical transient absorption spectra as a function of particle size and under a variety of solution conditions, and used cryogenic transmission electron microscopy to determine the aggregation state of the nanoparticles. We observed biphasic electron recombination kinetics over timescales that spanned picoseconds to microseconds, the slower regime of which was fit with a stretched exponential decay function. The recombination rates were weakly affected by nanoparticle size and aggregation state, suspension pH, and the injection of multiple electrons per nanoparticle. We conclude that electron mobility indeed limits the rate of interfacial electron transfer in these systems with the slowest processes relating to escape from deep traps, the presence of which outweighs the influence of environmental factors such as pH-dependent surface charge.

Revised: July 25, 2017 | Published: May 13, 2017

Citation

Soltis J.A., A. Schwartzberg, P.P. Zarzycki, R. Penn, K.M. Rosso, and B. Gilbert. 2017. Electron Mobility and Trapping in Ferrihydrite Nanoparticles. ACS Earth and Space Chemistry 1, no. 4:216-226. PNNL-SA-126107. doi:10.1021/acsearthspacechem.7b00030