4.6 Article

Quantum state-resolved CH4 dissociation on Pt(111): coverage dependent barrier heights from experiment and density functional theory

Journal

PHYSICAL CHEMISTRY CHEMICAL PHYSICS
Volume 15, Issue 47, Pages 20526-20535

Publisher

ROYAL SOC CHEMISTRY
DOI: 10.1039/c3cp52244j

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Swiss National Science Foundation [134709/1]
  2. Ecole Polytechnique Federale de Lausanne
  3. Division of Chemical Sciences, Office of Basic Energy Sciences, Office of Energy Research, U.S. Department of Energy [DE-FG02-87ER13744]
  4. Grants-in-Aid for Scientific Research [25887002] Funding Source: KAKEN

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The dissociative chemisorption of CH4 on Pt(111) was studied using quantum state-resolved methods at a surface temperature (T-s) of 150 K where the nascent reaction products CH3(ads) and H(ads) are stable and accumulate on the surface. Most previous experimental studies of methane chemisorption on transition metal surfaces report only the initial sticking coefficients S-0 on a clean surface. Reflection absorption infrared spectroscopy (RAIRS), used here for state resolved reactivity measurements, enables us to monitor the CH3(ads) uptake during molecular beam deposition as a function of incident translational energy (E-t) and vibrational state (nu(3) anti-symmetric C-H stretch of CH4) to obtain the initial sticking probability S-0, the coverage dependence of the sticking probability S(theta) and the CH3(ads) saturation coverage theta(sat). We observe that both S-0 and theta(sat) increase with increasing E-t as well as upon nu(3) excitation of the incident CH4 which indicates a coverage dependent dissociation barrier height for the dissociation of CH4 on Pt(111) at low surface temperature. This interpretation is supported by density functional calculations of barrier heights for dissociation, using large supercells containing one or more H and/or methyl adsorbates. We find a significant increase in the activation energies with coverage. These energies are used to construct simple models that reasonably reproduce the uptake data and the observed saturation coverages.

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