
Martina Datteo
Università di Milano-Bicocca, Italy
Title: Catalysis under Cover: Enhanced Reactivity at the Interface between (Doped) Graphene and Anatase TiO2
Biography
Biography: Martina Datteo
Abstract
The “catalysis under cover” involves chemical processes which take place in the conï¬ned zone between a 2D material, such as graphene, h-BN, or MoS2, and the surface of an underlying support, such as a metal or a semiconducting oxide [1,2]. The hybrid interface between graphene and anatase TiO2 is extremely important for photocatalytic and catalytic applications because of the excellent and complementary properties of the two materials [3]. We investigate and discuss the reactivity of O2 and H2O on top and at the interface of this hybrid system by means of a wide set of dispersion-corrected hybrid density functional calculations [4]. Both pure and boron- or nitrogen-doped graphene are interfaced with the most stable (101) anatase surface of TiO2 in order to improve the chemical activity of the C-layer. Especially in the case of boron, an enhanced reactivity toward O2 dissociation is observed as a result of both the contribution of the dopant and of the conï¬nement effect in the bidimensional area between the two surfaces. Extremely stable dissociation products are observed where the boron atom bridges the two systems by forming very stable B-O covalent bonds. Interestingly, the B defect in graphene could also act as the transfer channel of oxygen atoms from the top side across the C atomic layer into the G/TiO2 interface. On the contrary, the same conditions are not found to favor water dissociation, proving that the “catalysis under cover” is not a general effect, but rather highly depends on the interfacing material properties, on the presence of defects and impurities and on the speciï¬c reaction involved [5].