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1.
J Phys Chem Lett ; 11(6): 2211-2218, 2020 Mar 19.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32073863

RESUMO

Quasiclassical trajectory calculations and vibrational-state-selected beam-surface measurements of CH4 chemisorption on Ir(111) reveal a nonthermal, hot-molecule mechanism for C-H bond activation. Low-energy vibrationally excited molecules become trapped in the physisorption well and react before vibrational and translational energies accommodate the surface. The reaction probability is strongly surface-temperature-dependent and arises from the pivotal role of Ir atom thermal motion. In reactive trajectories, the mean outward Ir atom displacement largely exceeds that of the transition-state geometry obtained through a full geometry optimization. The study also highlights a new way for (temporary) surface defects to impact high-temperature heterogeneous catalytic reactivity. Instead of reactants diffusing to and competing for geometrically localized lower barrier sites, transient, thermally activated surface atom displacements deliver low-barrier surface reaction geometries to the physisorbed reactants.

3.
Nat Chem ; 10(6): 577-578, 2018 Jun.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29784989
4.
J Phys Chem Lett ; 8(17): 4177-4182, 2017 Sep 07.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28817773

RESUMO

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.

5.
J Phys Chem Lett ; 7(13): 2402-6, 2016 Jul 07.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27284787

RESUMO

Although important to heterogeneous catalysis, the ability to accurately model reactions of polyatomic molecules with metal surfaces has not kept pace with developments in gas phase dynamics. Partnering the specific reaction parameter (SRP) approach to density functional theory with ab initio molecular dynamics (AIMD) extends our ability to model reactions with metals with quantitative accuracy from only the lightest reactant, H2, to essentially all molecules. This is demonstrated with AIMD calculations on CHD3 + Ni(111) in which the SRP functional is fitted to supersonic beam experiments, and validated by showing that AIMD with the resulting functional reproduces initial-state selected sticking measurements with chemical accuracy (4.2 kJ/mol ≈ 1 kcal/mol). The need for only semilocal exchange makes our scheme computationally tractable for dissociation on transition metals.

6.
J Phys Chem A ; 119(50): 12434-41, 2015 Dec 17.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26406229

RESUMO

Studies exploring how vibrational energy (Evib) promotes chemical reactivity most often focus on molecular reagents, leaving the role of substrate atom motion in heterogeneous interfacial chemistry underexplored. This combined theoretical and experimental study of methane dissociation on Ni(111) shows that lattice atom motion modulates the reaction barrier height during each surface atom's vibrational period, which leads to a strong variation in the reaction probability (S0) with surface temperature (Tsurf). State-resolved beam-surface scattering studies at Tsurf = 90 K show a sharp threshold in S0 at translational energy (Etrans) = 42 kJ/mol. When Etrans decreases from 42 kJ/mol to 34 kJ/mol, S0 decreases 1000-fold at Tsurf = 90 K, but only 2-fold at Tsurf = 475 K. Results highlight the mechanism for this effect, provide benchmarks for DFT calculations, and suggest the potential importance of surface atom induced barrier height modulation in heterogeneously catalyzed reactions, particularly on structurally labile nanoscale particles and defect sites.

7.
Phys Chem Chem Phys ; 15(47): 20545-54, 2013 Dec 21.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24177493

RESUMO

The experimental observations of vibrational mode- and bond-selective chemistry at the gas-surface interface indicate that energy redistribution within the reaction complex is not statistical on the timescale of reaction. Such behavior is a key prerequisite for efforts to use selective vibrational excitation to control chemistry at the technologically important gas-surface interface. This paper outlines a framework for understanding the origin of non-statistical reactivity on surfaces. The model focuses on the kinetic competition between intramolecular vibrational energy redistribution (IVR) within the reaction complex, which in the long-time limit leads to statistical behavior, and quenching, scattering, or desorption processes that restrict the extent of IVR prior to reaction. Characteristic timescales for these processes drawn from studies of vibrational energy flow dynamics on surfaces and in the gas and condensed phases suggest that IVR is severely limited for important classes of surface reactions. Under these conditions, selective vibrational excitation can lead to preferential transition state access and result in mode- or bond-selective chemistry, even at high collision energies above the barrier to reaction. In addition to providing a basis for understanding experimental observations, the model provides guidance for identifying other gas-surface reactions that may exhibit mode-selective behavior.

8.
J Phys Chem A ; 117(29): 6250-5, 2013 Jul 25.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23638699

RESUMO

Vibrational state-resolved experiments that probe methane dissociation on Ni(111) quantify the reactivity of CH4 excited to the ν2 + ν4 bending vibration. A comparison of these data and previous state-resolved measurements reveals that this bending vibration is significantly less reactive than the ν3 C-H stretching vibration in the same polyad of vibrations. Comparison with the 3ν4 bend overtone also suggests that the doubly degenerate bending state, ν2, is less effective than the triply degenerate bend (ν4) in promoting methane dissociative chemisorption on Ni(111). This observation of vibrational mode selectivity contradicts thermal statistical theories of gas-surface reactivity and provides direct experimental evidence of roles that different vibrational states can play in activating this gas-surface reaction.

9.
Science ; 319(5864): 790-3, 2008 Feb 08.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-18258910

RESUMO

Energy redistribution, including the many phonon-assisted and electronically assisted energy-exchange processes at a gas-metal interface, can hamper vibrationally mediated selectivity in chemical reactions. We establish that these limitations do not prevent bond-selective control of a heterogeneously catalyzed reaction. State-resolved gas-surface scattering measurements show that the nu1 C-H stretch vibration in trideuteromethane (CHD3) selectively activates C-H bond cleavage on a Ni(111) surface. Isotope-resolved detection reveals a CD3:CHD2 product ratio > 30:1, which contrasts with the 1:3 ratio for an isoenergetic ensemble of CHD3 whose vibrations are statistically populated. Recent studies of vibrational energy redistribution in the gas and condensed phases suggest that other gas-surface reactions with similar vibrational energy flow dynamics might also be candidates for such bond-selective control.

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