Issue 26, 2026, Issue in Progress

First-principles study on strain-engineered photocatalytic performance in ferroelectric K(Ta0.5Nb0.5)O3

Abstract

Based on first-principles calculations, this study systematically investigated the evolution of structural stability, electronic structure, and bulk photoelectric properties of K(Ta0.5Nb0.5)O3 (KTN) under biaxial strain ranging from −30% to 30%. The calculation results show that KTN maintains structural integrity throughout the strain range. Tensile strain (5–30%) enhances structural stability, with the system's binding energy decreasing from −7.3 eV to −7.9 eV, accompanied by a phase transition from tetragonal to monoclinic. Under −30% compressive strain, KTN stabilizes in the monoclinic phase. The projected crystal orbital occupation numbers indicate that the overall covalent bond strength of the system increases with the increase of strain, and the electron distribution of the O–Nb bond shows a non-monotonic change, reaching a peak of 0.085 at approximately −10% strain. Strain regulation significantly enhances ferroelectric polarization intensity and promotes the separation of photogenerated electron–hole pairs. Compressive strain continuously reduces the band gap, with the calculated minimum value being 0.838 eV at −30% strain (this value may be underestimated due to the limitations of the PBE functional). The carriers exhibit a “heavy hole-light electron” characteristic Image ID:d5ra09223j-t1.gif, which is conducive to hole migration to the surface. Compressive strain (−30% to −15%) and 5% tensile strain can induce a redshift of the absorption edge, expanding the visible light response range. Notably, monoclinic KTN under −30% compressive strain shows an optimized trend in polarization intensity, carrier mobility, and light absorption rate. Although achieving ±30% strain through standard epitaxial growth techniques is currently difficult (this technique is usually limited to ±4% or so), exploring such extreme conditions enables us to separate the correlation between electronic effects and lattice instability and clearly reveal the regularity of orbital activity. This study provides theoretical guidance for strain engineering in the design of KTN-based photocatalytic materials, but to accurately predict actual photocatalytic activity (such as hydrogen evolution efficiency), systematic research combining surface reaction energy barriers, carrier recombination kinetics, and interface band bending effects is still needed.

Graphical abstract: First-principles study on strain-engineered photocatalytic performance in ferroelectric K(Ta0.5Nb0.5)O3

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
29 Nov 2025
Accepted
12 Apr 2026
First published
08 May 2026
This article is Open Access
Creative Commons BY-NC license

RSC Adv., 2026,16, 24055-24065

First-principles study on strain-engineered photocatalytic performance in ferroelectric K(Ta0.5Nb0.5)O3

X. Wen, R. Xia, Y. Zheng, Q. Chen, C. Zhao, X. Zhou, H. Yin, L. Zhang and Y. Huang, RSC Adv., 2026, 16, 24055 DOI: 10.1039/D5RA09223J

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