Ab Initio Mechanisms and Design Principles for Photodesorption from TiO${}_2$ (2503.03136v1)
Abstract: Photocatalytic reactions often exhibit fast kinetics and high product selectivity, qualities which are desirable but difficult to achieve simultaneously in thermally driven processes. However, photo-driven mechanisms are poorly understood owing to the difficulty in realistically modeling catalysts in optically excited states. Here we apply many-body perturbation theory (MBPT) calculations to gain insight into these mechanisms by studying a prototypical photocatalytic reaction, proton desorption from a rutile TiO${}_2$ (110) surface. Our calculations reveal a qualitatively different desorption process upon photoexcitation, with an over 50% reduction in the desorption energy and the emergence of an energy barrier. We rationalize these findings with a generalizable model based on Fano theory and explain the surprising increase of excitonic effects as the proton detaches from the surface. Our model also yields a connection between how the alignment of relevant ionization potentials affects the shape of the excited-state potential energy surface. These results cannot be qualitatively captured by typical constrained density-functional theory and highlight how contemporary first-principles MBPT calculations can be applied to design photocatalytic reactions.
Paper Prompts
Sign up for free to create and run prompts on this paper using GPT-5.
Top Community Prompts
Collections
Sign up for free to add this paper to one or more collections.