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Catalysis and corrosion: the theoretical surface-science context
Authors:Catherine Stampfl  M Veronica Ganduglia-Pirovano  Karsten Reuter  Matthias Scheffler
Institution:

aFritz-Haber-Institut der Max-Planck-Gesellschaft, Faradayweg 4-6, D-14195 Berlin-Dahlem, Germany

bDepartment of Physics and Astronomy, Northwestern University, 2145 Sheridan Road, Evanston, IL 60208-3112, USA

Abstract:Numerous experiments in ultra-high vacuum as well as (T=0 K, p=0) theoretical studies on surfaces have been performed over the last decades in order to gain a better understanding of the mechanisms, which, for example, underlie the phenomena of catalysis and corrosion. Often the results achieved this way cannot be extrapolated directly to the technologically relevant situation of finite temperature and high pressure. Accordingly, modern surface science has realized that bridging the so-called pressure gap (getting out of the vacuum) is the inevitable way to go. Of similar importance are studies in which the temperature is changed systematically (warming up and cooling down). Both aspects are being taken into account in recent experiments and ab initio calculations.

In this paper we stress that there is still much to learn and important questions to be answered concerning the complex atomic and molecular processes which occur at surfaces and actuate catalysis and corrosion, although significant advances in this exciting field have been made over the years. We demonstrate how synergetic effects between theory and experiment are leading to the next step, which is the development of simple concepts and understanding of the different modes of the interaction of chemisorbed species with surfaces. To a large extent this is being made possible by recent developments in theoretical methodology, which allow to extend the ab initio (i.e., starting from the self-consistent electronic structure) approach to poly-atomic complexes with 10,000 and more atoms, time scales of seconds, and involved statistics (e.g., ab initio molecular dynamics with 10,000 and more trajectories). In this paper we will

1. sketch recent density–functional theory based hybrid methods, which bridge the length and time scales from those of electron orbitals to meso- and macroscopic proportions, and

2. present some key results on properties of surfaces, demonstrating their role in corrosion and heterogeneous catalysis. In particular we discuss

? the influence of the ambient gas phase on the surface structure and stoichiometry,

? adsorbate phase transitions and thermal desorption, and

? the role of atoms' dynamics and statistics for the surface chemical reactivity.

Keywords: Density functional calculations; Non-equilibrium thermodynamics and statistical mechanics; Catalysis; Corrosion; Oxidation; Surface chemical reaction; Surface thermodynamics (including phase transitions); Ruthenium

Keywords:Density functional calculations  Non-equilibrium thermodynamics and statistical mechanics  Catalysis  Corrosion  Oxidation  Surface chemical reaction  Surface thermodynamics (including phase transitions)  Ruthenium
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