Abstract

We model TiO2 rutile (110) and anatase (101) surfaces and investigate the effect of adsorption of benzoic acid on the electronic structure of these systems. The surface−adsorbate electronic structure determines the rates of electron-transfer processes, which are important for dye-sensitized solar cells, in particular. We use density functional theory (DFT) and test the accuracy and efficiency of several DFT implementations (plane waves vs localized basis sets, all-electron vs pseudopotential calculations) as applied to the TiO2−adsorbate system. We explore the variation in the band gap, surface energies, and benzoic acid adsorption energies as a function of slab thickness. Our results show that a two-layer slab is sufficient to model the adsorption of benzoic acid on anatase, whereas for rutile, convergence is much more slow and not yet achieved in five-layer slabs. The effect of the adsorbate on the electronic structure is small in the case of anatase, but noticeable for rutile, where adsorbate states ap...

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