Abstract

To investigate the dissolution mechanism of Ti metal, ab initio calculations were conducted to observe the impact of Ti vacancy defects on the O-adsorbed Ti(0001) surface, focusing on the formation energies of Ti vacancy, geometric structures, and electronic structures. The surface structures subsequent to Ti dissolution were simulated by introducing a Ti cavity on both clean and O-adsorbed Ti(0001) surfaces. Our findings indicated that Ti vacancy formation energies and electrochemical dissolution potential on the O-adsorbed Ti(0001) surface surpassed those on the clean surface, and they increased with increasing O coverage. This suggested that O adsorption inhibited Ti dissolution and enhanced O atom interaction with the Ti surface as O coverage increased. Furthermore, at higher O coverage, Ti vacancies contributed to the strengthening of Ti-O bonds on the O-adsorbed Ti(0001) surface, indicating that Ti dissolution aided in stabilizing the Ti surface. The formation of Ti vacancies brought the atomic ratio of Ti to O on the Ti surface closer to that of TiO2, potentially explaining the increased stability of the structure with Ti vacancies.

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