Novel technological applications
in catalysis and bactericidal
formulation have emerged for zinc oxide (ZnO) nanoparticles owing
to their ability to generate reactive oxygen species by fostering
H2O dissociation. Rational improvement of those properties
requires a mechanistic understanding of ZnO nanoparticle reactivity,
which is currently lacking. Here, we determine the structural and
electronic properties of nanometer-sized ZnO, determine the binding
energetics of H2O adsorption, and compare to an extended
macroscopic surface. We show that the electronic density of states
of ZnO nanoparticles is size-dependent, exhibiting a decreasing bandgap
with the increase of nanoparticle diameter. The electronic states
near the Fermi energy dominantly arise from O 2p states, which are
spatially localized on “reactive” surface O atoms on
the nanoparticle edges that are doubly coordinated. The frontier electronic
states localized at the low coordinated atoms induce a spontaneous
dissociation of H2O at the nanoparticle edges. The surface
Zn and O atoms have inhomogeneous electronic and geometrical/topological
properties, thus providing nonequivalent sites for dissociative and
molecular H2O adsorption. The free energy of H2O binding is dominated by the electronic DFT interaction energy,
which is site-dependent and correlated with the Bader charge of surface
Zn atom. Entropy is found to stabilize the bound form, because the
increase in the vibrational contribution is greater than the decrease
in the translational and rotational contribution, whereas solvation
stabilizes the unbound state. The absence of rough edges on an extended,
macroscopic ZnO surface prevents spontaneous dissociation of a single
H2O. This study underlies the importance of coupling geometrical
and electronic degrees of freedom in determining the reactivity of
nanoparticles and provides a simple elucidation of the superior catalytic
activity of ZnO nanoparticles compared to ZnO in macroscopic forms.
Lignocellulose dissolution and fractionation into highly amorphous cellulose (and lignin) using ammonia-salt solvents under ambient conditions facilitates efficient biorefining.
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