Origin of the Energy Barrier to Chemical Reactions of O2 on Al(111): Evidence for Charge Transfer, Not Spin Selection

Florian Libisch, Chen Huang, Peilin Liao, Michele Pavone, and Emily A. Carter
Phys. Rev. Lett. 109, 198303 – Published 8 November 2012
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Abstract

Dissociative adsorption of molecular oxygen on the Al(111) surface exhibits mechanistic complexity that remains surprisingly poorly understood in terms of the underlying physics. Experiments clearly indicate substantial energy barriers and a mysteriously large number of adsorbed single oxygen atoms instead of pairs. Conventional first principles quantum mechanics (density functional theory) predicts no energy barrier at all; instead, spin selection rules have been invoked to explain the barrier. In this Letter, we show that correct barriers arise naturally when embedded correlated electron wave functions are used to capture the physics of the interaction of O2 with the metal surface. The barrier originates from an abrupt charge transfer (from metal to oxygen), which is properly treated within correlated wave function theory but not within conventional density functional theory. Our potential energy surfaces also identify oxygen atom abstraction as the dominant reaction pathway at low incident energies, consistent with measurements, and show that charge transfer occurs in a stepwise fashion.

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  • Received 10 January 2012

DOI:https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevLett.109.198303

© 2012 American Physical Society

Authors & Affiliations

Florian Libisch1, Chen Huang2, Peilin Liao1, Michele Pavone1,*, and Emily A. Carter1,†

  • 1Departments of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering and Chemistry, Program in Applied and Computational Mathematics, and Andlinger Center for Energy and the Environment, Princeton University, Princeton, New Jersey 08544, USA
  • 2Theoretical Division, Los Alamos National Laboratory, New Mexico 87544, USA

  • *Permanent address: Department of Chemistry, University of Napoli Federico II, Napoli 80120, Italy
  • eac@princeton.edu

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Issue

Vol. 109, Iss. 19 — 9 November 2012

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