Identification of large polarons in rutile and anatase polymorphs of titanium dioxide
ORAL
Abstract
Titanium dioxide (TiO2) is a wide-gap semiconductor with numerous applications in photocatalysis, photovoltaics, and neuromorphic computing. The unique functional properties of this material critically depend on its ability to transport charge in the form of polarons, namely phonon-dressed electron wavepackets. It is currently well established that the most important polymorphs of TiO2, the rutile and anatase phases, harbor small electron polarons and small hole polarons, respectively. However, whether additional polaronic species exist in TiO2, and under which conditions, remain open questions. Here, we provide definitive answers to these questions by using recently developed ab initio techniques. We identify three novel species, namely a large hole polaron in rutile, a large quasi-two-dimensional electron polaron in anatase, and a large excitonic polaron in anatase. These findings complete the puzzle on the polaorn physics of TiO2 and pave the way for systematically probing and manipulating polarons in a broad class of complex oxides and quantum materials.
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Presenters
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Zhenbang Dai
University of Texas at Austin
Authors
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Zhenbang Dai
University of Texas at Austin
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Feliciano Giustino
University of Texas at Austin