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Surface Reaction Barriometry: Methane Dissociation on Flat and Stepped Transition-Metal Surfaces
Author(s) -
Davide Migliorini,
Helen Chadwick,
Francesco Nattino,
Ana Gutiérrez-González,
Eric Dombrowski,
Eric A. High,
Han Guo,
A. L. Utz,
Bret Jackson,
Rainer D. Beck,
Geert–Jan Kroes
Publication year - 2017
Publication title -
the journal of physical chemistry letters
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.563
H-Index - 203
ISSN - 1948-7185
DOI - 10.1021/acs.jpclett.7b01905
Subject(s) - transferability , density functional theory , dissociation (chemistry) , catalysis , transition metal , molecule , transition state theory , chemical physics , methane , materials science , ab initio , metal , chemistry , computational chemistry , heterogeneous catalysis , molecular dynamics , nanotechnology , reaction rate constant , computer science , organic chemistry , physics , logit , quantum mechanics , machine learning , kinetics
Accurately simulating heterogeneously catalyzed reactions requires reliable barriers for molecules reacting at defects on metal surfaces, such as steps. However, first-principles methods capable of computing these barriers to chemical accuracy have yet to be demonstrated. We show that state-resolved molecular beam experiments combined with ab initio molecular dynamics using specific reaction parameter density functional theory (SRP-DFT) can determine the molecule-metal surface interaction with the required reliability. Crucially, SRP-DFT exhibits transferability: the functional devised for methane reacting on a flat (111) face of Pt (and Ni) also describes its reaction on stepped Pt(211) with chemical accuracy. Our approach can help bridge the materials gap between fundamental surface science studies on regular surfaces and heterogeneous catalysis in which defected surfaces are important.

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