4.6 Article

Theoretical Investigation of Photoinduced Processes in Subnanometer Oxide-Supported Metal Catalysts

Journal

JOURNAL OF PHYSICAL CHEMISTRY C
Volume 125, Issue 3, Pages 2022-2032

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acs.jpcc.0c08815

Keywords

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Funding

  1. NSF [CBET 1805022]
  2. Conacyt [A1-S-39326]

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This study computationally analyzes the optical absorption and photodecay processes of two subnanometer metal complexes on an oxide support. It reveals that complexes with bicarbonate and fluorocarbonate groups are sensitive to optical adsorption, often leading to ligand detachment and/or cluster disaggregation, possibly explaining previous experimental observations. Additionally, the study provides methodological tools to explore this novel field using time-dependent density-functional theory.
We report a computational study and analysis of the optical absorption and photodecay processes in two subnanometer metal complexes deposited on an oxide support, the regular MgO(100) surface: (i) Ag-3(HCO3)(C2H4)(2)(O) and (ii) Ag-3(CO2F)(C2H4)(2)(O). These aggregates are chosen as derivatives of a Ag-3(CO3)(C2H4)(2)(O) ligand/metal-cluster/support complex, previously singled out as a key intermediate in the path of ethylene partial oxidation to ethylene epoxide catalyzed by Ag-3/MgO(100), and serve as model systems to investigate photochemical phenomena in ligand/metal-cluster/support complexes by subnanometer metal catalysts, an appealing field for future research. After generating optimized initial configurations and building cluster models that take properly into account the effect of the charge-separated oxide support, we use time-dependent density-functional theory (TDDFT) to determine first the photoabsorption spectra of the two aggregates and then to follow the evolution of their excited states in the optical region. We show that complexes containing such bicarbonate and fluorocarbonate groups are sensitive to optical adsorption, often leading to ligand detachment and/or cluster disaggregation, thus pointing to an optical frailty of these subnanometer cluster species, possibly rationalizing previous experimental observations. Additionally, we correlate the nature of the given excitations and of the corresponding photoinduced reaction products via an analysis of overlap population-density of states (OP-DOS), geometric parameters, and spatial distribution of the molecular orbitals involved in the excitation, thus providing the set of methodological tools needed to explore this novel field.

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