We present a Molecular Dynamics (MD) study based on Density Functional Theory (DFT) calculations for H(2) interacting with a Pd-Cu(111) surface alloy for low Pd coverages, Θ(Pd). Our results show, in line with recent experimental data, that single isolated Pd atoms evaporated on Cu(111) significantly increase the reactivity of the otherwise inert pure Cu surface. On top of substitutional Pd atoms in the Pd-Cu(111) surface alloy, the activation energy barrier for H(2) dissociation is smaller than the lowest one found on Cu(111) by a factor of two: 0.25 eV vs. 0.46 eV. Also in agreement with experiments, our DFT-MD calculations show that a large fraction of the dissociating H atoms efficiently spillover from Pd (i.e. the active sites), thanks to their extra kinetic energy due to the ~0.50 eV chemisorption exothermicity. Still, our DFT-MD calculations predict a dissociative sticking probability for low energy H(2) molecules that is much smaller than the estimated value from scanning tunneling microscopy experiments. Thus, further theoretical and experimental investigations are required for a complete understanding of H(2) dissociation on low-Θ(Pd) Pd-Cu(111) surface alloys.
The dissociative adsorption of molecular hydrogen on Pd(x)Ru(1-x)/Ru(0001) (0 ≤ x ≤ 1) has been investigated by means of He atom scattering, Density Functional Theory and quasi-classical trajectory calculations. Regardless of their surroundings, Pd atoms in the alloy are always less reactive than Ru ones. However, the reactivity of Ru atoms is enhanced by the presence of nearest neighbor Pd atoms. This environment-dependent reactivity of the Ru atoms in the alloy provides a sound explanation for the striking step-like dependence of the initial reactive sticking probability as a function of the Pd concentration observed in experiments. Moreover, we show that these environment-dependent effects on the reactivity of H2 on single atoms allow one to get around the usual constraint imposed by the Brønsted-Evans-Polanyi relationship between the reaction barrier and chemisorption energy.
The role of spin non-adiabatic effects in the reactivity of O on metal surfaces has been a matter of debate for several years. By means of density functional theory with a semi-local exchange-correlation functional, and classical dynamics calculations, we show that the recently observed activated character of O adsorption on Cu(111) and Cu/Ru(0001), as well as the delicate interplay between dissociative and non-dissociative O sticking on Cu(111) at different surface temperatures, can be explained by assuming an adiabatic evolution of the molecular spin. This suggests that spin adiabaticity during O adsorption on metal surfaces could be a more general scenario than anticipated.
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