4.6 Article

Surface Temperature Effects on Dissociative Chemisorption of H2 on Cu(100)

Journal

JOURNAL OF PHYSICAL CHEMISTRY C
Volume 117, Issue 17, Pages 8851-8863

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/jp401311k

Keywords

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Funding

  1. TOP grant from Chemical Sciences of NWO (Nederlandse organisatie voor Wetenschappelijk Onderzoek)

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At present, much remains unknown about the effect surface phonons and surface temperature may have on the reactivity of molecules at surfaces. Here, this problem is addressed for the dissociation of H-2 on Copper, which is a benchmark system for activated dissociative chemisorption on a metal surface. Ab Initio Molecular Dynamics (AIMD) calculations, quantum dynamics calculations using a static surface model, and experiments are reported and compared on the effects of surface temperature (T-s) on the initial state selected reaction of (v = 0, j = 8) and (v = 1, j = 4) H-2 scattering from Cu(100) and the orientational dependence of this process, at T-s = 1030 K. In the theory, the specific reaction parameter approach to density functional theory (SRP-DFT) was used The rotational quadrupole alignment parameters computed for H-2 reacting on the hot Cu(100) surface (1030 K) are smaller than the values computed with a static surface model. The initial state selected reaction probabilities computed with AIMD for the hot surface are shifted to lower energies, by 40-60 meV, and broadened with respect to static surface quantum dynamics results. The rotational quadrupole alignment parameters computed with AIMD are in good agreement with experiment if the experimental results are shifted to lower energies by 100-150 meV. The AIMD average desorption energies underestimate the experimental results by 150-180 meV. Our study shows that the H-2 + Cu(100) system presents a useful benchmark for the simultaneously accurate description of dissociative chemisorption and surface thermal effects on reaction because surface temperature effects on the (100) surface are much more pronounced than on the Cu(111) surface, while the (100) face does not yet show surface reconstruction at temperatures of interest to associative desorption experiments

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