Abstract
Scanning electrochemical microscopy (SECM) has previously been employed in probing photoelectrochemical processes at semiconductor surfaces. However, the spatial resolution of these studies has not yet matched the nanoscale SECM resolution attained without substrate illumination. Herein, we introduce nanoscale photo-SECM with a glass-sealed, polished tip simultaneously serving as a nanoelectrode and a light guide to produce a microscopic light spot on the substrate surface. The advantages of this approach are demonstrated by comparing current transients obtained using through-tip and global illumination of the sample. The spot of light on the substrate surface facing the nanotip was sufficiently bright to measure the diffusion-controlled positive feedback current in good agreement with the theory. We employed this approach for high-resolution photoelectrochemical mapping of ferrocenemethanol oxidation and oxygen evolution reactions at the Nb:TiO2 rutile (110) single crystal surface. The images obtained using 40-50 nm radius tips showed only minor and random variations in photoelectrochemical reactivity for both processes, pointing to essentially uniform distribution of the Nb dopant over the TiO2 surface and no measurable segregation on the ∼50 nm scale.
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