Aidi Zhao
University of Science and Technology of China
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Featured researches published by Aidi Zhao.
Nature Communications | 2013
Yang Wang; Huijuan Sun; Shijing Tan; Hao Feng; Zhengwang Cheng; Jin Zhao; Aidi Zhao; Bing Wang; Yongyao Luo; Jinlong Yang; Jiwei Hou
The chemical reactivity of different surfaces of titanium dioxide (TiO2) has been the subject of extensive studies in recent decades. The anatase TiO2(001) and its (1 × 4) reconstructed surfaces were theoretically considered to be the most reactive and have been heavily pursued by synthetic chemists. However, the lack of direct experimental verification or determination of the active sites on these surfaces has caused controversy and debate. Here we report a systematic study on an anatase TiO2(001)-(1 × 4) surface by means of microscopic and spectroscopic techniques in combination with first-principles calculations. Two types of intrinsic point defects are identified, among which only the Ti3+ defect site on the reduced surface demonstrates considerable chemical activity. The perfect surface itself can be fully oxidized, but shows no obvious activity. Our findings suggest that the reactivity of the anatase TiO2(001) surface should depend on its reduction status, similar to that of rutile TiO2 surfaces.
Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2011
Shijing Tan; Yongfei Ji; Yan Zhao; Aidi Zhao; Bing Wang; Jinlong Yang; J. G. Hou
A knowledge of adsorption behaviors of oxygen on the model system of the reduced rutile TiO(2)(110)-1×1 surface is of great importance for an atomistic understanding of many chemical processes. We present a scanning tunneling microcopy (STM) study on the adsorption of molecular oxygen either at the bridge-bonded oxygen vacancies (BBO(V)) or at the hydroxyls (OH) on the TiO(2)(110)-1×1 surface. Using an in situ O(2) dosing method, we are able to directly verify the exact adsorption sites and the dynamic behaviors of molecular O(2). Our experiments provide direct evidence that an O(2) molecule can intrinsically adsorb at both the BBO(V) and the OH sites. It has been identified that, at a low coverage of O(2), the singly adsorbed molecular O(2) at BBO(V) can be dissociated through an intermediate state as driven by the STM tip. However, singly adsorbed molecular O(2) at OH can survive from such a tip-induced effect, which implies that the singly adsorbed O(2) at OH is more stable than that at BBO(V). It is interesting to observe that when the BBO(V)s are fully filled with excess O(2) dosing, the adsorbed O(2) molecules at BBO(V) tend to be nondissociative even under a higher bias voltage of 2.2 V. Such a nondissociative behavior is most likely attributed to the presence of two or more O(2) molecules simultaneously adsorbed at a BBO(V) with a more stable configuration than singly adsorbed molecular O(2) at a BBO(V).
Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2012
Shijing Tan; Hao Feng; Yongfei Ji; Yang Wang; Jin Zhao; Aidi Zhao; Bing Wang; Yi Luo; Jinlong Yang; J. G. Hou
The water splitting reaction based on the promising TiO(2) photocatalyst is one of the fundamental processes that bears significant implication in hydrogen energy technology and has been extensively studied. However, a long-standing puzzling question in understanding the reaction sequence of the water splitting is whether the initial reaction step is a photocatalytic process and how it happens. Here, using the low temperature scanning tunneling microscopy (STM) performed at 80 K, we observed the dissociation of individually adsorbed water molecules at the 5-fold coordinated Ti (Ti(5c)) sites of the reduced TiO(2) (110)-1 × 1 surface under the irradiation of UV lights with the wavelength shorter than 400 nm, or to say its energy larger than the band gap of 3.1 eV for the rutile TiO(2). This finding thus clearly suggests the involvement of a photocatalytic dissociation process that produces two kinds of hydroxyl species. One is always present at the adjacent bridging oxygen sites, that is, OH(br), and the other either occurs as OH(t) at Ti(5c) sites away from the original ones or even desorbs from the surface. In comparison, the tip-induced dissociation of the water can only produce OH(t) or oxygen adatoms exactly at the original Ti(5c) sites, without the trace of OH(br). Such a difference clearly indicates that the photocatalytic dissociation of the water undergoes a process that differs significantly from the attachment of electrons injected by the tip. Our results imply that the initial step of the water dissociation under the UV light irradiation may not be reduced by the electrons, but most likely oxidized by the holes generated by the photons.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2009
Shuan Pan; Qiang Fu; Tian Huang; Aidi Zhao; Bing Wang; Yi Luo; Jinlong Yang; Jianguo Hou
We demonstrate in this joint experimental and theoretical study how one can alter electron transport behavior of a single melamine molecule adsorbed on a Cu (100) surface by performing a sequence of elegantly devised and well-controlled single molecular chemical processes. It is found that with a dehydrogenation reaction, the melamine molecule becomes firmly bonded onto the Cu surface and acts as a normal conductor controlled by elastic electron tunneling. A current-induced hydrogen tautomerization process results in an asymmetric melamine tautomer, which in turn leads to a significant rectifying effect. Furthermore, by switching on inelastic multielectron scattering processes, mechanical oscillations of an N-H bond between two configurations of the asymmetric tautomer can be triggered with tuneable frequency. Collectively, this designed molecule exhibits rectifying and switching functions simultaneously over a wide range of external voltage.
Nature Communications | 2014
Xiaofang Zhai; Long Cheng; Yang Liu; Christian M. Schlepütz; Shuai Dong; Hui Li; Xiaoqiang Zhang; Shengqi Chu; Lirong Zheng; Jing Zhang; Aidi Zhao; Hawoong Hong; Anand Bhattacharya; James N. Eckstein; Changgan Zeng
Lattice distortion due to oxygen octahedral rotations have a significant role in mediating the magnetism in oxides, and recently attracts a lot of interests in the study of complex oxides interface. However, the direct experimental evidence for the interrelation between octahedral rotation and magnetism at interface is scarce. Here we demonstrate that interfacial octahedral rotation are closely linked to the strongly modified ferromagnetism in (LaMnO3+δ)N/(SrTiO3)N superlattices. The maximized ferromagnetic moment in the N=6 superlattice is accompanied by a metastable structure (space group Imcm) featuring minimal octahedral rotations (a(-)a(-)c(-), α~4.2°, γ~0.5°). Quenched ferromagnetism for N<4 superlattices is correlated to a substantially enhanced c axis octahedral rotation (a(-)a(-)c(-), α~3.8°, γ~8° for N=2). Monte-Carlo simulation based on double-exchange model qualitatively reproduces the experimental observation, confirming the correlation between octahedral rotation and magnetism. Our study demonstrates that engineering superlattices with controllable interfacial structures can be a feasible new route in realizing functional magnetic materials.
Physical Review B | 2011
Shijing Tan; Yan Zhao; Jin Zhao; Zhuo Wang; Chuanxu Ma; Aidi Zhao; Bing Wang; Yi Luo; Jinlong Yang; Jianguo Hou
Converting CO
Journal of Chemical Physics | 2008
Aidi Zhao; Zhenpeng Hu; Bing Wang; Xudong Xiao; Jinlong Yang; J. G. Hou
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Advanced Materials | 2010
Shuan Pan; Aidi Zhao; Bing Wang; Jinlong Yang; Jianguo Hou
to useful compounds through the solar photocatalytic reduction has been one of the most promising strategies for artificial carbon recycling. The highly relevant photocatalytic substrate for CO
Nature Communications | 2016
Hongjian Du; Xia Sun; Xiaogang Liu; Xiaojun Wu; Jufeng Wang; Aidi Zhao; Yi Luo; Jinlong Yang; Bing Wang; J. G. Hou
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NANO | 2006
Jianguo Hou; Aidi Zhao
conversion has been the popular TiO