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The Importance of Charge Redistribution during Electrochemical Reactions: A Density Functional Theory Study of Silver Orthophosphate (Ag3PO4)

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Abstract

The structural sensitivity of silver orthophosphate (Ag 3 PO 4 ) for photo-electrochemical water oxidation on (100), (110) and (111) surfaces has recently been reported by experimental studies (D. J. Martin et al., Energy Environ. Sci., 2013, 6, 3380-3386). The (111) surface showed the highest performance with an oxygen evolution rate of 10 times higher than the other surfaces. The high performance of the (111) surface was attributed to high hole mobility, high surface energy and, in a recent theoretical study (Z. Ma et al., RSC Adv., 2017, 7, 23994-24003), to a lower OH adsorption energy and the band structure. The investigations are based on a few structures and a full atomistic picture of the Ag 3 PO 4 under electrochemical reactions is still missing. Therefore, we report here a systematic study of the oxygen evolution reaction (OER) of Ag 3 PO 4 (100), (110), and (111) surfaces by density functional theory (DFT) calculations. Through a detailed investigation of the reaction energies and the overpotentials of OER on all possible surface orientations with all possible terminations and different involvement of Ag adsorption sites, we can confirm that (111) surfaces are highly active. However, surface orientation was not found to exclusively determine the electrochemical activity; neither did the number of Ag atoms involved in the adsorption of the intermediate species nor the type of surface termination or the different potential determining reaction steps. By using Bader charge analysis and investigation of the charge redistribution during OER, we found that the highest activity, i.e. lowest overpotential, is related to the charge redistribution of two OER steps, namely the O ad and the HOO ad formation. If the charge redistribution between these steps is small, then the overpotential is small and, hence, the activity is high. Charge redistributions are usually small for the (111) surface and therefore the (111) surface is usually the most active one. The concept of charge redistribution being decisive for the high activity of Ag 3 PO 4 may open a new design strategy for materials with highly efficient electrochemical surfaces.

Year of Publication
2019
Journal
Physical Chemistry Chemical Physics
Volume
21
Issue
18
Number of Pages
9531-9537
Publisher
The Royal Society of Chemistry
DOI
PId
9f40b4a19edc5b1d6e330f8583074de2
Alternate Journal
Phys. Chem. Chem. Phys.
Label
OA
Attachment
Journal Article
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