Journal article
Authors list: Hess, F; Rohrlack, S; Knapp, M; Over, H
Publication year: 2022
Pages: 946-956
Journal: Journal of Physical Chemistry C
Volume number: 126
Issue number: 2
ISSN: 1932-7447
DOI Link: https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.jpcc.1c08787
Publisher: American Chemical Society
Abstract:
RuO2(100), an efficient low-temperature oxidation model catalyst, is able to undergo a c(2 x 2) reconstruction with a so far unknown surface structure that is accompanied by the loss of its catalytic activity. Here, the surface structure of the c(2 x 2) reconstruction of RuO2(100) is predicted by ab initio molecular dynamics simulations and shown to be consistent with available surface science experiments from the literature, including scanning tunneling microscopy (STM) images, low-energy electron diffraction (LEED) intensity versus voltage experiments, and thermal desorption experiments of O-2. Mechanistically, the c(2 x 2) reconstruction starts from a simple c(2 x 2) overlayer structure of on-top O on RuO2(100), where the remaining undercoordinated surface Ru centers shift laterally toward the on-top O position, thereby breaking two Ru-O back bonds to lattice oxygen and forming a new Ru-O bond with on-top O. This leads to the formation of a tetrahedrally coordinated surface species Ru-4f, a process that is activated by 0.95 eV and that results in an energy stabilization of 0.66 eV. The c(2 x 2) surface structure can readily explain the lack of activity in catalytic CO oxidation. The CO molecule is much more weakly bound on RuO2(100)-c(2 x 2) reconstruction than on the RuO2(110) or the RuO2(100)-(1 x 1) surface, and in addition, the Ru-4f centers are too far apart to allow for O-2 activation. The identified Ru-4f surface species is expected to play a prevailing role as precursor species in the missing thermal and electrochemical stability of RuO2 under oxidizing reaction conditions by forming volatile RuO4.
Citation Styles
Harvard Citation style: Hess, F., Rohrlack, S., Knapp, M. and Over, H. (2022) Evidence of a Tetrahedrally Coordinated RuO4 Surface Complex on RuO2(100): Density Functional Theory and Beyond, Journal of Physical Chemistry C, 126(2), pp. 946-956. https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.jpcc.1c08787
APA Citation style: Hess, F., Rohrlack, S., Knapp, M., & Over, H. (2022). Evidence of a Tetrahedrally Coordinated RuO4 Surface Complex on RuO2(100): Density Functional Theory and Beyond. Journal of Physical Chemistry C. 126(2), 946-956. https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.jpcc.1c08787