Challenges for density functional theory: calculation of CO adsorption on electrocatalytically relevant metals
Author(s) -
Christian. Lininger,
Joseph A. Gauthier,
WanLu Li,
Elliot Rossomme,
Valerie Vaissier Welborn,
Zhou Lin,
Teresa HeadGordon,
Martin HeadGordon,
Alexis T. Bell
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
physical chemistry chemical physics
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.053
H-Index - 239
eISSN - 1463-9084
pISSN - 1463-9076
DOI - 10.1039/d0cp03821k
Subject(s) - density functional theory , adsorption , surface (topology) , binding energy , materials science , thermodynamics , chemistry , computational chemistry , chemical physics , physics , mathematics , atomic physics , geometry
Density Functional Theory (DFT) is currently the most tractable choice of theoretical model used to understand the mechanistic pathways for electrocatalytic processes such as CO 2 or CO reduction. Here, we assess the performance of two DFT functionals designed specifically to describe surface interactions, RTPSS and RPBE, as well as two popular meta-GGA functionals, SCAN and B97M-rV, that have not been a priori optimized for better interfacial properties. We assess all four functionals against available experimental data for prediction of bulk and bare surface properties on four electrocatalytically relevant metals, Au, Ag, Cu, and Pt, and for binding CO to surfaces of these metals. To partially mitigate issues such as thermal and anharmonic corrections associated with comparing computations with experiments, molecular benchmarks against high level quantum chemistry are reported for CO complexes with Au, Ag, Cu and Pt atoms, as well as the CO-water complex and the water dimer. Overall, we find that the surface modified RPBE functional performs reliably for many of the benchmarks examined here, and the meta-GGA functionals also show promising results. Specifically B97M-rV predicts the correct site preference for CO binding on Ag and Au (the only functional tested here to do so), while RTPSS performs well for surface relaxations and binding of CO on Pt and Cu.
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