4.6 Article

A first-principles study of molecular oxygen dissociation at an electrode surface: a comparison of potential variation and coadsorption effects

Journal

PHYSICAL CHEMISTRY CHEMICAL PHYSICS
Volume 10, Issue 25, Pages 3613-3627

Publisher

ROYAL SOC CHEMISTRY
DOI: 10.1039/b803157f

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Influences of coadsorbed sodium and water, aqueous solvent, and electrode potential on the kinetics of O-2 dissociation over Pt(111) are systematically investigated using density functional theory models of vacuum and electrochemical interfaces. Na coadsorption alters the electronic states of Pt to stabilize the reactant (O-2*), transition, and product (2O*) states by facilitating electron donation to oxygen, causing a more exothermic reaction energy (-0.84 eV for Na and O-2, -0.81 eV for isolated O-2) and a decrease in dissociation barrier (0.39 eV for Na and O-2, 0.57 eV for isolated O-2). Solvation decreases the reaction energy (-0.67 eV) due to enhanced hydrogen bond stabilization of O-2* compared to 2O*. The influence of Na is less pronounced at the solvated interface (barrier decreases by only 0.11 eV) because H2O screens Na charge-donation. In the electrochemical model system, the dissociation energy becomes more exothermic and the barrier decreases toward more positive potentials. Potential-dependent behavior results from changes in interfacial dipole moment and polarizability between O-2*, the dissociation transition state, and 2O*; each are influenced by changes in adsorption and hydrogen bonding. Coadsorption of Na in the solvated system dampens the dipole moment change between O-2* and 2O* and significantly increases the polarizability at the dissociation transition state and for 2O*; the combination causes little change in the reaction energy but reduces the activation barrier by 0.08 eV at 0 V versus NHE. The potential-dependent behavior contrasts that determined at a constant surface charge or from an applied electric field, illustrating the importance of considering the electrochemical potential at the fully-solvated interface in determining reaction energetics, even for non-redox reactions.

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