Litcius/Paper detail

Chemical transformations and transport phenomena at interfaces

Hongxia Hao, Luis Ruiz Pestana, Jin Qian, Meili Liu, Qiang Xu, Teresa Head‐Gordon

2022Wiley Interdisciplinary Reviews Computational Molecular Science19 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Abstract Interfaces, the boundary that separates two or more chemical compositions and/or phases of matter, alters basic chemical and physical properties including the thermodynamics of selectivity, transition states, and pathways of chemical reactions, nucleation events and phase growth, and kinetic barriers and mechanisms for mass transport and heat transport. While progress has been made in advancing more interface‐sensitive experimental approaches, their interpretation requires new theoretical methods and models that in turn can further elaborate on the microscopic physics that make interfacial chemistry so unique compared to the bulk phase. In this review, we describe some of the most recent theoretical efforts in modeling interfaces, and what has been learned about the transport and chemical transformations that occur at the air–liquid and solid–liquid interfaces. This article is categorized under: Structure and Mechanism > Reaction Mechanisms and Catalysis Structure and Mechanism > Computational Materials Science Software > Quantum Chemistry Software > Simulation Methods

Topics & Concepts

Mass transportNucleationChemical physicsMechanism (biology)Chemical reactionTransport phenomenaChemical processInterface (matter)Liquid phaseQuantum chemicalChemistryNanotechnologyMaterials sciencePhysicsPhysical chemistryThermodynamicsMoleculeEngineering physicsOrganic chemistryQuantum mechanicsGibbs isothermAdsorptionBiochemistrynanoparticles nucleation surface interactionsThermal properties of materialsPhase Equilibria and Thermodynamics