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Water Multilayers on TiO2 (101) Anatase Surface: Assessment of a DFTB-Based Method.

Daniele SelliGianluca FazioGotthard SeifertCristiana Di Valentin
Published in: Journal of chemical theory and computation (2017)
A water/(101) anatase TiO2 interface has been investigated with the DFT-based self-consistent-charge density functional tight-binding theory (SCC-DFTB). By comparison of the computed structural, energetic, and dynamical properties with standard DFT-GGA and experimental data, we assess the accuracy of SCC-DFTB for this prototypical solid-liquid interface. We tested different available SCC-DFTB parameters for Ti-containing compounds and, accordingly, combined them to improve the reliability of the method. To better describe water energetics, we have also introduced a modified hydrogen-bond-damping function (HBD). With this correction, equilibrium structures and adsorption energies of water on (101) anatase both for low (0.25 ML) and full (1 ML) coverages are in excellent agreement with those obtained with a higher level of theory (DFT-GGA). Furthermore, Born-Oppenheimer molecular dynamics (MD) simulations for mono-, bi-, and trilayers of water on the surface, as computed with SCC-DFTB, evidence similar ordering and energetics as DFT-GGA Car-Parrinello MD results. Finally, we have evaluated the energy barrier for the dissociation of a water molecule on the anatase (101) surface. Overall, the combined set of parameters with the HBD correction (SCC-DFTB+HBD) is shown to provide a description of the water/water/titania interface, which is very close to that obtained by standard DFT-GGA, with a remarkably reduced computational cost. Hence, this study opens the way to the future investigations on much more extended and realistic TiO2/liquid water systems, which are extremely relevant for many modern technological applications.
Keyphrases
  • molecular dynamics
  • density functional theory
  • molecular docking
  • computed tomography
  • machine learning
  • high resolution
  • magnetic resonance
  • molecular dynamics simulations
  • crystal structure
  • visible light