Morphology effects in photoactive ZnO nanostructures: photooxidative activity of polar surfaces

Publication date

2020-06-17T08:51:04Z

2020-06-17T08:51:04Z

2015-03-13

2020-06-17T08:51:05Z

Abstract

A series of ZnO nanostructures with variable morphology were prepared by a microemulsion method and their structural, morphological, and electronic properties were investigated by a combined experimental and theoretical approach using microscopy (high resolution transmission electron microscopy) and spectroscopic (X-ray diffraction, Raman, and UV-visible) tools, together with density functional theory calculations. The present experimental and computational study provides a detailed insight into the relationship between surface-related physicochemical properties and the photochemical response of ZnO nanostructures. Specifically, the present results provide evidence that the light-triggered photochemical activity of ZnO nanostructures is related to the predominance of highly-active (polar) surfaces, in particular, the amount of Zn-terminated (0001) surfaces, rather than band gap sizes, carrier mobilities, and other variables usually mentioned in the literature. The computational results highlight the oxidative capability of polar surfaces, independently of the degree of hydration.

Document Type

Article


Accepted version

Language

English

Publisher

Royal Society of Chemistry

Related items

Versió postprint del document publicat a: https://doi.org/10.1039/C5TA01111F

Journal of Materials Chemistry A, 2015, vol. 3, num. 16, p. 8782-8792

https://doi.org/10.1039/C5TA01111F

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Rights

(c) Iglesias-Juez, Ana et al., 2015

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