200,297 research outputs found
Impact of co-adsorbed oxygen on crotonaldehyde adsorption over gold nanoclusters : a computational study
Crotonaldehyde (2-butenal) adsorption over gold sub-nanometer particles, and the influence of co-adsorbed oxygen, has been systematically investigated by computational methods. Using density functional theory, the adsorption energetics of crotonaldehyde on bare and oxidised gold clusters (Au13, d = 0.8 nm) were determined as a function of oxygen coverage and coordination geometry. At low oxygen coverage, sites are available for which crotonaldehyde adsorption is enhanced relative to bare Au clusters by 10 kJ mol−1. At higher oxygen coverage, crotonaldehyde is forced to adsorb in close proximity to oxygen weakening adsorption by up to 60 kJ mol−1 relative to bare Au. Bonding geometries, density of states plots and Bader analysis, are used to elucidate crotonaldehyde bonding to gold nanoparticles in terms of partial electron transfer from Au to crotonaldehyde, and note that donation to gold from crotonaldehyde also becomes significant following metal oxidation. At high oxygen coverage we find that all molecular adsorption sites have a neighbouring, destabilising, oxygen adatom so that despite enhanced donation, crotonaldehyde adsorption is always weakened by steric interactions. For a larger cluster (Au38, d = 1.1 nm) crotonaldehyde adsorption is destabilized in this way even at a low oxygen coverage. These findings provide a quantitative framework to underpin the experimentally observed influence of oxygen on the selective oxidation of crotyl alcohol to crotonaldehyde over gold and gold–palladium alloys
Impact of co-adsorbed oxygen on crotonaldehyde adsorption over gold nanoclusters : a computational study
Crotonaldehyde (2-butenal) adsorption over gold sub-nanometer particles, and the influence of co-adsorbed oxygen, has been systematically investigated by computational methods. Using density functional theory, the adsorption energetics of crotonaldehyde on bare and oxidised gold clusters (Au13, d = 0.8 nm) were determined as a function of oxygen coverage and coordination geometry. At low oxygen coverage, sites are available for which crotonaldehyde adsorption is enhanced relative to bare Au clusters by 10 kJ mol−1. At higher oxygen coverage, crotonaldehyde is forced to adsorb in close proximity to oxygen weakening adsorption by up to 60 kJ mol−1 relative to bare Au. Bonding geometries, density of states plots and Bader analysis, are used to elucidate crotonaldehyde bonding to gold nanoparticles in terms of partial electron transfer from Au to crotonaldehyde, and note that donation to gold from crotonaldehyde also becomes significant following metal oxidation. At high oxygen coverage we find that all molecular adsorption sites have a neighbouring, destabilising, oxygen adatom so that despite enhanced donation, crotonaldehyde adsorption is always weakened by steric interactions. For a larger cluster (Au38, d = 1.1 nm) crotonaldehyde adsorption is destabilized in this way even at a low oxygen coverage. These findings provide a quantitative framework to underpin the experimentally observed influence of oxygen on the selective oxidation of crotyl alcohol to crotonaldehyde over gold and gold–palladium alloys
Atmospheric composition affects heat- and mass-transfer processes
For environmental control system functions sensitive to atmospheric composition, components are test-operated in helium-oxygen and nitrogen-oxygen mixtures, pure oxygen, and air. Transient heat- and mass-transfer tests are conducted for carbon dioxide adsorption on molecular sieve and for water vapor adsorption on silica gel
Domain formation on oxidized graphene
Using first-principles calculations within density functional theory we
demonstrate that the adsorption of single oxygen atom results in significant
electron transfer from graphene to oxygen. This strongly disturbs the charge
landscape of the C-C bonds at the proximity. Additional oxygen atoms adsorbing
to graphene prefer always the C-C bonds having highest charge density and
consequently they have tendency to form domain structure. While oxygen
adsorption to one side of graphene ends with significant buckling, the
adsorption to both sides with similar domain pattern is favored. The binding
energy displays an oscillatory variation and the band gap widens with
increasing oxygen coverage. While a single oxygen atom migrates over the C-C
bonds on graphene surface, a repulsive interaction prevents two oxygen adatoms
from forming an oxygen molecule. Our first-principles study together with
finite temperature ab-initio molecular dynamics calculations concludes that
oxygen adatoms on graphene cannot desorb easily without influence of external
agents.Comment: under revie
Ab-initio density functional study of O on the Ag(001) surface
The adsorption of oxygen on the Ag(001) is investigated by means of density
functional techniques. Starting from a characterization of the clean silver
surfaces oxygen adsorption in several modifications (molecularly, on-surface,
sub-surface, AgO) for varying coverage was studied. Besides structural
parameters and adsorption energies also work-function changes, vibrational
frequencies and core level energies were calculated for a better
characterization of the adsorption structures and an easier comparison to the
rich experimental data.Comment: 26 pages, 8 figures, Surf. Sci. accepte
Quantum oscillations in adsorption energetics of atomic oxygen on Pb(111) ultrathin films: A density-functional theory study
Using first-principles calculations, we have systematically studied the
quantum size effects of ultrathin Pb(111) films on the adsorption energies and
diffusion energy barriers of oxygen atoms. For the on-surface adsorption of
oxygen atoms at different coverages, all the adsorption energies are found to
show bilayer oscillation behaviors. It is also found that the work function of
Pb(111) films still keeps the bilayer-oscillation behavior after the adsorption
of oxygen atoms, with the values being enlarged by 2.10 to 2.62 eV. For the
diffusion and penetration of the adsorbed oxygen atoms, it is found that the
most energetically favored paths are the same on different Pb(111) films. And
because of the modulation of quantum size effects, the corresponding energy
barriers are all oscillating with a bilayer period on different Pb(111) films.
Our studies indicate that the quantum size effect in ultrathin metal films can
modulate a lot of processes during surface oxidation
Density-functional study of oxygen adsorption on Mo(112)
Atomic oxygen adsorption on the Mo(112) surface has been investigated by
means of first-principles total energy calculations. Among the variety of
possible adsorption sites it was found that the bridge sites between two Mo
atoms of the topmost row are favored for O adsorption at low and medium
coverages. At about one monolayer coverage oxygen atoms prefer to adsorb in a
quasi-threefold hollow sites coordinated by two first-layer Mo atoms and one
second layer atom. The stability of a structural model for an oxygen-induced
reconstruction of the missing-row type is examined.Comment: 6 pages, 6 postscript figures, RevTe
Kinetic and mechanistic aspects of the oxidative coupling of methane over a Li/MgO catalyst
The rate of reaction of methane with oxygen in the presence of a Li-doped MgO catalyst has been studied as a function of the partial pressures of CH4, O2 and CO2 in a well-mixed reaction system which is practically gradientless with respect to gas-phase concentrations. It is concluded that the rate determining step involves reaction of methane adsorbed on the catalyst surface with a di-atomic oxygen species. The adsorption of oxygen is relatively weak. Carbon dioxide acts as a poison for the reaction of methane with oxygen, this probably being caused by competitive adsorption on the sites where oxygen (and possibly also methane) adsorbs
Sub-surface Oxygen and Surface Oxide Formation at Ag(111): A Density-functional Theory Investigation
To help provide insight into the remarkable catalytic behavior of the
oxygen/silver system for heterogeneous oxidation reactions, purely sub-surface
oxygen, and structures involving both on-surface and sub-surface oxygen, as
well as oxide-like structures at the Ag(111) surface have been studied for a
wide range of coverages and adsorption sites using density-functional theory.
Adsorption on the surface in fcc sites is energetically favorable for low
coverages, while for higher coverage a thin surface-oxide structure is
energetically favorable. This structure has been proposed to correspond to the
experimentally observed (4x4) phase. With increasing O concentrations, thicker
oxide-like structures resembling compressed Ag2O(111) surfaces are
energetically favored. Due to the relatively low thermal stability of these
structures, and the very low sticking probability of O2 at Ag(111), their
formation and observation may require the use of atomic oxygen (or ozone, O3)
and low temperatures. We also investigate diffusion of O into the sub-surface
region at low coverage (0.11 ML), and the effect of surface Ag vacancies in the
adsorption of atomic oxygen and ozone-like species. The present studies,
together with our earlier investigations of on-surface and
surface-substitutional adsorption, provide a comprehensive picture of the
behavior and chemical nature of the interaction of oxygen and Ag(111), as well
as of the initial stages of oxide formation.Comment: 17 pages including 14 figures, Related publications can be found at
http://www.fhi-berlin.mpg.de/th/paper.htm
Atomic oxygen adsorption and incipient oxidation of the Pb(111) surface: A density-functional theory study
We study the atomic oxygen adsorption on Pb(111) surface by using
density-functional theory within the generalized gradient approximation and a
supercell approach. The atomic and energetic properties of purely on-surface
and subsurface oxygen structures at the Pb(111) surface are systematically
investigated for a wide range of coverages and adsorption sites. The fcc and
tetra-II sites (see the text for definition) are found to be energetically
preferred for the on-surface and subsurface adsorption, respectively, in the
whole range of coverage considered. The on-surface and subsurface oxygen
binding energies monotonically increase with the coverage, and the latter is
always higher than the former, thus indicating the tendency to the formation of
oxygen islands (clusters) and the higher stability of subsurface adsorption.
The on-surface and subsurface diffusion-path energetics of atomic oxygen, and
the activation barriers for the O penetration from the on-surface to the
subsurface sites are presented at low and high coverages. In particular, it is
shown that the penetration barrier from the on-surface hcp to the subsurface
tetra-I site is as small as 65 meV at low coverage (=0.25). The other
properties of the O/Pb(111) system, including the charge distribution, the
lattice relaxation, the work function, and the electronic density of states,
are also studied and discussed in detail, which consistently show the gradually
stabilizing ionic O-Pb bond with increase of the oxygen coverage.Comment: 31 pages, 16 figure
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