4.4 Article

Water adsorption on stepped ZnO surfaces from MD simulation

Journal

SURFACE SCIENCE
Volume 604, Issue 9-10, Pages 741-752

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.susc.2009.12.012

Keywords

Zinc oxide; Water; Solid-gas interfaces; Construction and use of effective interatomic interactions; Molecular dynamics; Density-functional calculations

Funding

  1. Swedish Research Council
  2. NSF [DMR 0427177]

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This work presents a ReaxFF reactive force-field for use in molecular dynamics simulations of the ZnO-water system. The force-field parameters were fitted to a data-set of energies, geometries and charges derived from quantum-mechanical B3LYP calculations. The presented ReaxFF model provides a good fit to the QM reference data for the ZnO-water system that was present in the data-set. The force-field has been used to study how water is adsorbed, molecularly or dissociatively, at monolayer coverage on flat and stepped ZnO surfaces, at three different temperatures (10 K, 300 K, and 600 K). The stepped surfaces were created by introducing steps along the (0 0 0 1)-direction on the (1 0 (1) over bar 0)-surface. Equilibrium between molecular and dissociated water was observed on the (1 0 (1) over bar 0) terraces, resulting in a half dissociated, half molecular water monolayer. The equilibrium between dissociated and molecular water on the surface was found to be reached quickly (<10 ps). When water molecules desorb and the coverage falls, the 1:1 water-hydroxyl ratio is maintained on (1 0 <(1)over bar> 0) terraces, while steps remain largely hydroxylated. The results show that structures that promote hydrogen bonding are favored and that the presence of steps promotes an increased level of hydroxylation in the water monolayers. (C) 2009 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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