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Orbital mechanism of upright CO activation on Fe(100)
Author(s) -
Li Jibiao,
He Xin,
Oguzie Emeka,
Peng Cheng
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
surface and interface analysis
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.52
H-Index - 90
eISSN - 1096-9918
pISSN - 0142-2421
DOI - 10.1002/sia.6678
Subject(s) - chemistry , atomic orbital , chemical physics , pauli exclusion principle , excited state , molecule , atomic physics , electron , quantum mechanics , physics , organic chemistry
The knowledge of bond activation forms a cornerstone for modern chemistry, wherein symmetry rules of electronic activation lie in the heart of bond activation. However, the question as to how a chemical bond is activated remains elusive. By taking CO activated on Fe(100), herein, we have resolved the long‐standing fundamental question; we have found that excitations in the adsorbate feature the bond activation. We essentially have discovered contrasting electronic processes in respective σ and π electron systems of the adsorbed CO molecule. The σ electron system is involved in reversible hidden excitations/deexcitations between two occupied σ orbitals, whereas the π electron system is subject to irreversible π to π* excitations dispersed along the d‐band region, which is coupled to the rotational 2π electron couplings depending on the strength of molecule‐metal interactions. The σ excitations pertain to the Pauli repulsion mediated quantum nature with energy and entropy marked by the two energy levels, whereas the π to π* excitations fall into a new category of electronic excitations contributing to energy and entropy exchanges in a wide and continuous d‐band region. The findings that the internal states of the adsorbate are excited and that fundamental connections between the frontier orbitals and low‐lying orbitals are established as the molecule comes to the surface may open up new channels to realize more efficient bond activation and renew our thinking on probing the quantum mechanical nature of bond activation at surfaces with further possible impact on manipulation of orbital activation in femtochemistry and attochemistry.

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