Adsorbate Coverage Dependence in Heterogeneous Catalysis: Kinetics of Oxygen Adsorption on Platinum Surfaces from First Principles
However, due to the complexity and heterogeneity of real heterogeneous catalysts, purely computational methods have difficulties predicting quantitatively accurate metrics of catalyst performance. A fundamental inconsistency exists between the kinetic models typically used to understand experimental results and the nature of first-principles data intended to parameterize such models. To overcome this 'model gap,' new kinetic models must be developed to incorporate surface heterogeneity directly into the rate expressions.
In this work, we combine DFT calculations with cluster expansion and Monte Carlo techniques to model reactivity at catalyst surfaces completely from first principles. Oxygen adsorption to transition metal surfaces, particularly platinum, is a critical step in many catalytic oxidation reactions and presents interesting modeling challenges due to the existence of strong lateral interactions between adsorbates. We first characterize the coverage-dependent adsorption thermodynamics of oxygen on the low-symmetry Pt(321) surface, identifying ground state structures and examining their relative stability when exposed to various gas-phase environments.
We then explore the coverage-dependent kinetics of O2 dissociation on this surface in the context of Pt-catalyzed NO oxidation:
NO(g) + 1/2 O2(g) <--> NO2(g)
and temperature programmed desorption of O2 from Pt:
2 O* --> O2(g) + *
In doing so, we introduce a non-mean-field, first-principles 'reaction site' kinetic model and develop a novel combination of computational tools needed for practical application of this model. We report the first molecularly detailed, quantitatively accurate model of NO oxidation on Pt and examine how the structure insensitivity observed experimentally is tied to the coverage-induced heterogeneity in this system. We also predict oxygen TPD in agreement with experiment and provide insight into the role of adsorbate-adsorbate interactions in determining the shape and position of desorption peaks.
History
Date Modified
2017-06-02Defense Date
2013-04-05Research Director(s)
William F. SchneiderCommittee Members
Paul J. McGinn William F. Schneider J. Daniel Gezelter Fabio H. RibeiroDegree
- Doctor of Philosophy
Degree Level
- Doctoral Dissertation
Language
- English
Alternate Identifier
etd-04192013-131903Publisher
University of Notre DameAdditional Groups
- Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering
Program Name
- Chemical Engineering