Litcius/Paper detail

Revealing Local and Directional Aspects of Catalytic Active Sites by the Nuclear and Surface Electrostatic Potential

Joakim Halldin Stenlid, Frank Abild‐Pedersen

2024The Journal of Physical Chemistry C19 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

This work examines the prospects of using the electrostatic potential, V ( r ), as a descriptor in heterogeneous catalysis. In particular, the subatomic spatial resolution of the property allows for analysis of both directionality and confinement effects in surface adsorption. This feature of V ( r ) is used to identify adsorption sites, orientations, and energetics for metal surfaces, particles, and nanoclusters upon interactions with catalytically relevant intermediates. The use of V ( r ) in assessing the 3D nature of catalytic sites in low-temperature and electrocatalysis is highlighted, and future directions in catalysis design are discussed. Ultimately, we provide a critical analysis of the use of V ( r ) in the predictions of local adsorption susceptibilities, and we address its limitations. The link between V ( r ) and other established descriptors in catalysis are motivated via physical relations and theoretical derivations; close ties are established between V ( r ) and the d -band center (ε d ), as well as the surface site stability (BE M ). By comparing the performance of V ( r ) evaluated on isodensity contours, i.e., the surface electrostatic potential, to that of V ( r ) evaluated at the nucleus of an atom, we investigate the application space for a directional and an atom-localized version of the V ( r ) descriptor for catalyst design.

Topics & Concepts

CatalysisNanoclustersAdsorptionSubatomic particleSurface (topology)Chemical physicsChemistryElectrostaticsAtom (system on chip)NanotechnologyComputational chemistryPhysicsPhysical chemistryMaterials scienceQuantum mechanicsComputer scienceGeometryMathematicsElementary particleBiochemistryEmbedded systemMachine Learning in Materials ScienceAdvanced Chemical Physics StudiesSurface Chemistry and Catalysis