Fingerprints of energy dissipation for exothermic surface chemical reactions: O2 on Pd(100)
Author(s) -
Vanessa J. Bukas,
Shubhrajyoti Mitra,
Jörg Meyer,
Karsten Reuter
Publication year - 2015
Publication title -
the journal of chemical physics
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.071
H-Index - 357
eISSN - 1089-7690
pISSN - 0021-9606
DOI - 10.1063/1.4926989
Subject(s) - sticking coefficient , dissipation , exothermic reaction , kinetic energy , density functional theory , potential energy , sticking probability , potential energy surface , adsorption , molecular dynamics , thermodynamics , langevin dynamics , materials science , activation energy , chemical physics , chemistry , computational chemistry , statistical physics , physics , desorption , molecule , atomic physics , classical mechanics , organic chemistry
We present first-principles calculations of the sticking coefficient of O2 at Pd(100) to assess the effect of phononic energy dissipation on this kinetic parameter. For this, we augment dynamical simulations on six-dimensional potential energy surfaces (PESs) representing the molecular degrees of freedom with various effective accounts of surface mobility. In comparison to the prevalent frozen-surface approach, energy dissipation is found to qualitatively affect the calculated sticking curves. At the level of a generalized Langevin oscillator model, we achieve good agreement with experimental data. The agreement is similarly reached for PESs based on two different semi-local density-functional theory functionals. This robustness of the simulated sticking curve does not extend to the underlying adsorption mechanism, which is predominantly directly dissociative for one functional or molecularly trapped for the other. Completely different adsorption mechanisms therewith lead to rather similar sticking curves that agree equally well with the experimental data. This highlights the danger of the prevalent practice to extract corresponding mechanistic details from simple fingerprints of measured sticking data for such exothermic surface reactions.
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