Abstract
Titanium Nitride (TiN)
surfaces can oxidise and the growth of a TiOx layer on the surface
along with the likely presence of water in the surrounding environment can
modify the properties of this widely used coating material. The present Density
Functional Theory study, including Hubbard +U correction (DFT+U), investigates the
stability of adsorbed water at TiO2-TiN interfaces with different
defects, that serve as a model for an oxide layer grown on a TiN surface.
Surface free energy calculations show the stability of perfect TiN-TiO2
interface at regular O pressures, while oxygen vacancy-rich TiO1.88–TiN
is more favourable at reducing conditions. An isolated water is preferentially
adsorbed dissociatively at perfect and oxygen defective interfaces while
molecular adsorption is more stable at higher coverages. The adsorption energy
is stronger at the oxygen defective interfaces which arises from the high
concentration of reduced Ti3+ and strong interfacial atomic
relaxations. Ab initio atomistic thermodynamics show that water will be present
at high coverage on TiO2-TiN interfaces at ambient conditions and
the pristine interface is only stable at very low pressure of O and H2O.
The results of these DFT+U simulations are important for the fundamental
understanding of wettability of interfacial systems involving metal oxides.
Supplementary materials
Title
Stability of Adsorbed Water on TiO2-TiN Interfaces PREPRINT
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