Abstract

The wide band gap γ-Bi2MoO6 (BMO) has tremendous potential in emergent solar harvesting applications. Here we present a combined experimental-first-principles density functional theory (DFT) approach to probe physical properties relevant to the light sensitivity of BMO like dynamic and structural stability, Raman and infrared absorption modes, value and nature of band gap (i.e., direct or indirect), dielectric constant, and optical absorption, etc. We solvothermally synthesized wide band gap Pca21 phase pure BMO (≳3 eV) for two different pH values of 7 and 9. The structural parameters were correlated with the stability of BMO derived from elastic tensor simulations. The desired dynamical stability at T = 0 K was established from the phonon vibrational band structure using a finite difference-based supercell approach. The DFT-based Raman modes and phonon density of states (DOS) reliably reproduced the experimental Raman and infrared absorption. The electronic DOS calculated from Heyd-Scuseria-Ernzerhof HSE06 with van der Waals (vdW) and relativistic spin-orbit coupling (SOC) corrections produced a good agreement with the band gap obtained from diffuse reflectance spectroscopy (DRS). The optical absorption obtained from the complex dielectric constant for the HSE06+SOC+vdW potential closely resembled the DRS-derived absorption of BMO. The BMO shows ∼43% photocatalytic efficiency in degrading methylene blue dye under 75 min optical illumination. This combined DFT-experimental approach may provide a better understanding of the properties of BMO relevant to solar harvesting applications.

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