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1.
J Phys Chem C Nanomater Interfaces ; 125(9): 5110-5115, 2021 Mar 11.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34178204

ABSTRACT

We have studied the dissociative adsorption of hydrogen under high coverage conditions of adsorbed hydrogen on Pd and Pt nanoislands supported on Au(111) using Density Functional Theory calculations. The results reveal that for Pd/Au(111), the free energy of hydrogen adsorption ΔG is close to 0 kJ/mol when the coverage of adsorbed hydrogen is near 1 ML, where the available catalytic sites are located at the edges of the Pd nanoislands. In the case of Pt/Au(111), ΔG ≈ 0 kJ/mol under a broad range of hydrogen coverage conditions, from 1 ML to 3 ML, depending on the size of the Pt nanoislands. This is the case because the available catalytic sites are located at both the steps and terraces of Pt nanoislands. These findings indicate that Au surfaces with Pd or Pt nanoislands offer catalytic sites with ΔG ≈ 0 for hydrogen reactions, one key factor for an ideal electrocatalyst for hydrogen reactions.

2.
J Phys Chem C Nanomater Interfaces ; 124(24): 13225-13230, 2020 Jun 18.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32952771

ABSTRACT

Recent experiments demonstrated that the catalytic centers for the hydrogen evolution reaction (HER) are different on Pd and Pt nanoislands on Au(111). Inspired by these experiments, we examined the geometric, energetic, electronic and hydrogen adsorption properties of monolayer model nanoislands of Pd and Pt supported on Au(111) with density functional theory calculations. Accordingly, Au-tensile strain effects can be nearly 50% larger on the geometric structure of nanoislands of Pd on Au(111) than their Pt analogs, resulting on different electronic properties for these nanoislands. Despite these differences between Pd and Pt nanoisland on Au(111), our computational modelling of the hydrogen adsorption suggests that the unique catalytic centers for the HER on Pd and Pt nanoislands supported on Au(111) derive from the existence of low-coordinated adsorption sites and the intrinsic properties of Pd and Pt, but not from Au-tensile strain effects.

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