With
density functional calculations, we studied the size dependence
of adsorption properties of metal nanoparticles (NPs) via the example
of CO as a probe on Pt
n
clusters with n = 38–260 atoms. For the largest NPs considered,
the calculated adsorption energies lie below the corresponding value
for the (ideal) infinite surface Pt(111). For clusters of 38–116
atoms, we calculated a sharp increase of the adsorption energy with
decreasing cluster size. These opposite trends meet in an intermediate
size range, for clusters of about 200 atoms, yielding the lowest adsorption
energies. These computational results suggest that a nanosized transition
to a pronounced higher adsorption activity occurs for Pt NPs at notably
larger nuclearities than for Pd NPs. We analyze the results by invoking
the concept of generalized coordination numbers, adapted to the second-order
level.
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