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Perturbation of the UV transitions of formaldehyde by TiO 2 photocatalysts and Au n nanoclusters.

Nicolai Machholdt HøyerMatthew Stanley JohnsonKurt V Mikkelsen
Published in: Physical chemistry chemical physics : PCCP (2022)
In the gas phase, formaldehyde has an electric-dipole forbidden transition that becomes allowed by vibronic coupling. In this paper we explore whether perturbation by surfaces could also enhance light absorption by CH 2 O. We investigate the electronic transitions of formaldehyde in the gas phase and interacting with rutile (110) TiO 2 , Au n nanoclusters, and Au n on (110)-TiO 2 . These surfaces are chosen as being representative of metals and metal-oxide minerals, and also because of specific interest in photocatalysts and noble metal nanocluster catalysts. The oscillator strength of the forbidden n → π* transition of formaldehyde in vacuum is investigated by modelling vibrational coupling to the electronic transition with equation-of-motion coupled cluster theory. The excitation energies and oscillator strengths of formaldehyde are calculated for different orientations and distances to the surfaces using the coupled cluster singles and doubles linear response method within the Quantum Mechanical and Molecular Mechanical (QM/MM) model using the aug-cc-pVTZ basis set and compared with the values calculated in vacuo . The electronic transitions of formaldehyde vary very little when placed near a pure TiO 2 -surface with only minor variations depending on the orientation of formaldehyde. Introducing a gold nanoparticle (by itself or supported by TiO 2 ) induces dramatic changes in the absorption properties. This is due to vibronic interactions and the effect of the broken symmetry on the n → π* transition. We see a large redshift in the transition of 90 nm and oscillator strengths larger than 1.0 × 10 -4 for CH 2 O interacting with Au n .
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