Kyriakou Georgios, Davidson Erlend R M, Peng Guowen, Roling Luke T, Singh Suyash, Boucher Matthew B, Marcinkowski Matthew D, Mavrikakis Manos, Michaelides Angelos, Sykes E Charles H
Department of Chemistry, Tufts University , Medford, Massachusetts 02155-58132, United States.
ACS Nano. 2014 May 27;8(5):4827-35. doi: 10.1021/nn500703k. Epub 2014 Apr 8.
Dissociation of molecular hydrogen is an important step in a wide variety of chemical, biological, and physical processes. Due to the light mass of hydrogen, it is recognized that quantum effects are often important to its reactivity. However, understanding how quantum effects impact the reactivity of hydrogen is still in its infancy. Here, we examine this issue using a well-defined Pd/Cu(111) alloy that allows the activation of hydrogen and deuterium molecules to be examined at individual Pd atom surface sites over a wide range of temperatures. Experiments comparing the uptake of hydrogen and deuterium as a function of temperature reveal completely different behavior of the two species. The rate of hydrogen activation increases at lower sample temperature, whereas deuterium activation slows as the temperature is lowered. Density functional theory simulations in which quantum nuclear effects are accounted for reveal that tunneling through the dissociation barrier is prevalent for H2 up to ∼190 K and for D2 up to ∼140 K. Kinetic Monte Carlo simulations indicate that the effective barrier to H2 dissociation is so low that hydrogen uptake on the surface is limited merely by thermodynamics, whereas the D2 dissociation process is controlled by kinetics. These data illustrate the complexity and inherent quantum nature of this ubiquitous and seemingly simple chemical process. Examining these effects in other systems with a similar range of approaches may uncover temperature regimes where quantum effects can be harnessed, yielding greater control of bond-breaking processes at surfaces and uncovering useful chemistries such as selective bond activation or isotope separation.
分子氢的解离是多种化学、生物和物理过程中的重要步骤。由于氢的质量轻,人们认识到量子效应通常对其反应活性很重要。然而,了解量子效应如何影响氢的反应活性仍处于起步阶段。在这里,我们使用一种定义明确的Pd/Cu(111)合金来研究这个问题,该合金能够在很宽的温度范围内,在单个钯原子表面位点上研究氢分子和氘分子的活化情况。比较氢和氘的吸收量随温度变化的实验揭示了这两种物质完全不同的行为。氢活化速率在较低的样品温度下增加,而氘活化则随着温度降低而减慢。考虑了量子核效应的密度泛函理论模拟表明,对于H₂,高达约190K时通过解离势垒的隧穿是普遍存在的,对于D₂,高达约140K时也是如此。动力学蒙特卡罗模拟表明,H₂解离的有效势垒非常低,以至于表面上的氢吸收仅仅受热力学限制,而D₂解离过程则由动力学控制。这些数据说明了这个普遍存在且看似简单的化学过程的复杂性和内在量子性质。用类似的一系列方法在其他系统中研究这些效应,可能会发现可以利用量子效应的温度范围,从而更好地控制表面的断键过程,并揭示有用的化学性质,如选择性键活化或同位素分离。