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Surface-Driven Electron Localization and Defect Heterogeneity in Ceria.

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|September 9, 2025
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This summary is machine-generated.

The ratio of oxygen vacancies to cerium ions in ceria (CeO2) differs locally, especially in nanoparticles. Electrons prefer to segregate on surfaces, influencing defect chemistry crucial for catalysis and energy applications.

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Area of Science:

  • Materials Science
  • Surface Science
  • Catalysis

Background:

  • Ceria (CeO2) exhibits excellent catalytic and energy conversion properties.
  • These properties are strongly linked to its defect chemistry, particularly oxygen vacancies (VO••).
  • Traditionally, oxygen vacancies are assumed to be compensated by two Ce3+ ions (1 VO••: 2Ce3+).

Purpose of the Study:

  • To investigate the local distribution of charge compensation in ceria nanoparticles.
  • To understand how oxygen vacancies and electrons (Ce3+) interact at the surface versus the bulk.
  • To determine the impact of nanoparticle size and reduction level on defect heterogeneity.

Main Methods:

  • Hybrid quantum mechanical/molecular mechanical (QM/MM) defect calculations.
  • Synchrotron X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS) measurements.
  • Large-scale unbiased Monte Carlo simulations.

Main Results:

  • The 1 VO••: 2Ce3+ ratio is a global approximation; local ratios vary significantly.
  • Electrons preferentially segregate onto ceria surfaces, leading to a higher Ce3+ to VO•• ratio on surfaces compared to the bulk.
  • Surface electron segregation is more pronounced in smaller nanoparticles and at lower reduction levels, though highly reduced conditions can alter this trend.

Conclusions:

  • Local defect chemistry in ceria nanoparticles is complex and deviates from bulk assumptions.
  • Surface segregation of electrons plays a critical role in ceria's defect behavior.
  • Accurate modeling of defect heterogeneity is essential for optimizing ceria-based catalysts and energy devices.