February 21, 2017
Journal Article

Probing Equilibrium of Molecular and Deprotonated Water on TiO2(110)

Abstract

Understanding water structure and its deprotonation dynamics on oxide surfaces is key to understanding many physical and chemical processes. In this study, we directly measure the energy barriers associated with the protonation equilibrium of water on the prototypical oxide surface, rutile-TiO2(110) by a combination of a supersonic molecular beam, scanning tunneling microscopy, and ab initio molecular dynamics simulations. We show that long-range electrostatic fields emanating from the oxide lead to steering and reorientation of the molecules approaching the surface, activating the O-H bonds and inducing deprotonation. The incident energy dependent studies allow for a direct determination of the dissociation barrier. Temperature dependent imaging yields the reverse barrier and the equilibrium constant. Molecularly bound water is preferred by 0.035 eV over the surface-bound hydroxyls. The techniques developed in this work are readily extended to other systems where the understanding of bond-activation processes is critical.

Revised: June 29, 2017 | Published: February 21, 2017

Citation

Wang Z., Y. Wang, R. Mu, Y. Yoon, A.P. Dahal, G.K. Schenter, and V. Glezakou, et al. 2017. Probing Equilibrium of Molecular and Deprotonated Water on TiO2(110). Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS) 114, no. 8:1801-1805. PNNL-SA-119143. doi:10.1073/pnas.1613756114