Back to Search Start Over

Water Structures Reveal Local Hydrophobicity on the In2O3(111) Surface

Authors :
Chen, Hao
Blatnik, Matthias A.
Ritterhoff, Christian L.
Sokolović, Igor
Mirabella, Francesca
Franceschi, Giada
Riva, Michele
Schmid, Michael
Čechal, Jan
Meyer, Bernd
Diebold, Ulrike
Wagner, Margareta
Source :
ACS Nano 16, 2022, 21163-21173
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

Clean oxide surfaces are generally hydrophilic. Water molecules anchor at undercoordinated surface metal atoms that act as Lewis-acid sites, and they are stabilized by H bonds to undercoordinated surface oxygens. The large unit cell of In2O3(111) provides surface atoms in various configurations, which leads to chemical heterogeneity and a local deviation from this general rule. Experiments (TPD, XPS, ncAFM) agree quantitatively with DFT calculations and show a series of distinct phases. The first three water molecules dissociate at one specific area of the unit cell and desorb above room temperature. The next three adsorb as molecules in the adjacent region. Three more water molecules rearrange this structure and an additional nine pile up above the OH groups. Despite offering undercoordinated In and O sites, the rest of the unit cell is unfavorable for adsorption and remains water-free. The first water layer thus shows ordering into nanoscopic 3D water clusters separated by hydrophobic pockets.

Details

Database :
arXiv
Journal :
ACS Nano 16, 2022, 21163-21173
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.2308.11404
Document Type :
Working Paper
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1021/acsnano.2c09115