▎ 摘 要
The pursuit of superb building blocks of light harvesting systems has stimulated increasing efforts to develop graphene (GR)-based semiconductor composites for solar cells and photocatalysts. One critical issue for GR-based composites is understanding the interaction between their components, a problem that remains unresolved after intense experimental investigation. Here, we use cerium dioxide (CeO2) as a model semiconductor to systematically explore the interaction of semiconductor with GR and reduced graphene oxide (RGO) with large-scale ab initio calculations. The amount of charge transferred at the interfaces increases with the concentration of O atoms, demonstrating that the interaction between CeO2 and RGO is much stronger than that between CeO2 and GR due to the decrease of the average equilibrium distance between the interfaces. The stronger interaction between semiconductor and RGO is expected to be general, as evidenced by the results of two paradigms of TiO2 and Ag3PO4 coupled with RGO. The interfacial interaction can tune the band structure: the CeO2(111)/GR interface is a type-I heterojunction, while a type-II staggered band alignment exists between the CeO2(111) surface and RGO. The smaller band gap, type-II heterojunction, and negatively charged O atoms on the RGO as active sites are responsible for the enhanced photoactivity of CeO2/RGO composite. These findings can rationalize the available experimental reports and enrich our understanding of the interaction of GR-based composites for developing high-performance photocatalysts and solar cells.