Quantum dynamics study on the effects of vibration, translational energy and incident angle on H2 adsorption on a defective Pt(111) surface

© 2014 The Physical Society of Japan. Quantum dynamics calculations via the local reflection matrix method are performed to investigate the effects of the vibration and initial translational energy on the dissociative adsorption of H2 approaching a defective Pt(111) surface at different incident ang...

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Main Authors: Natividad, Michelle T., Arboleda, Nelson B., Kasai, Hideaki
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Published: Animo Repository 2014
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Online Access:https://animorepository.dlsu.edu.ph/faculty_research/3822
https://animorepository.dlsu.edu.ph/context/faculty_research/article/4824/type/native/viewcontent/JPSJ.83.124801
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spelling oai:animorepository.dlsu.edu.ph:faculty_research-48242021-10-13T07:46:59Z Quantum dynamics study on the effects of vibration, translational energy and incident angle on H2 adsorption on a defective Pt(111) surface Natividad, Michelle T. Arboleda, Nelson B. Kasai, Hideaki © 2014 The Physical Society of Japan. Quantum dynamics calculations via the local reflection matrix method are performed to investigate the effects of the vibration and initial translational energy on the dissociative adsorption of H2 approaching a defective Pt(111) surface at different incident angles and adsorption sites. The sticking probability plot for H2 incident on the top site at 15° shows that as the translational energy is increased, the probability rapidly rises to unity which suggests that H2 is easily adsorbed on the Pt surface. The plot also shows that even though the adsorption process is non-activated, there is a probability that H2 will not be adsorbed on the Pt surface at low translational energies due to quantum mechanical effects. For the rest of the configurations, an S-shaped region is observed in the plots suggesting an activated adsorption process. The plots show that when the initial translational energy (Et) is less that the barrier, H2 sticks to the Pt surface by tunneling through the barrier and when Et is greater than the barrier, H2 sticks on the Pt surface by using its available energy to overcome the barrier. The plots also show significant vibration assisted sticking (VAS) effect for all cases. VAS effect is most prominent for H2 approaching the vacant site at incident angles 15 and 30°. 2014-12-15T08:00:00Z text text/html https://animorepository.dlsu.edu.ph/faculty_research/3822 info:doi/10.7566/JPSJ.83.124801 https://animorepository.dlsu.edu.ph/context/faculty_research/article/4824/type/native/viewcontent/JPSJ.83.124801 Faculty Research Work Animo Repository Hydrogen—Absorption and adsorption Hot-atom chemistry Chemisorption Quantum theory
institution De La Salle University
building De La Salle University Library
continent Asia
country Philippines
Philippines
content_provider De La Salle University Library
collection DLSU Institutional Repository
topic Hydrogen—Absorption and adsorption
Hot-atom chemistry
Chemisorption
Quantum theory
spellingShingle Hydrogen—Absorption and adsorption
Hot-atom chemistry
Chemisorption
Quantum theory
Natividad, Michelle T.
Arboleda, Nelson B.
Kasai, Hideaki
Quantum dynamics study on the effects of vibration, translational energy and incident angle on H2 adsorption on a defective Pt(111) surface
description © 2014 The Physical Society of Japan. Quantum dynamics calculations via the local reflection matrix method are performed to investigate the effects of the vibration and initial translational energy on the dissociative adsorption of H2 approaching a defective Pt(111) surface at different incident angles and adsorption sites. The sticking probability plot for H2 incident on the top site at 15° shows that as the translational energy is increased, the probability rapidly rises to unity which suggests that H2 is easily adsorbed on the Pt surface. The plot also shows that even though the adsorption process is non-activated, there is a probability that H2 will not be adsorbed on the Pt surface at low translational energies due to quantum mechanical effects. For the rest of the configurations, an S-shaped region is observed in the plots suggesting an activated adsorption process. The plots show that when the initial translational energy (Et) is less that the barrier, H2 sticks to the Pt surface by tunneling through the barrier and when Et is greater than the barrier, H2 sticks on the Pt surface by using its available energy to overcome the barrier. The plots also show significant vibration assisted sticking (VAS) effect for all cases. VAS effect is most prominent for H2 approaching the vacant site at incident angles 15 and 30°.
format text
author Natividad, Michelle T.
Arboleda, Nelson B.
Kasai, Hideaki
author_facet Natividad, Michelle T.
Arboleda, Nelson B.
Kasai, Hideaki
author_sort Natividad, Michelle T.
title Quantum dynamics study on the effects of vibration, translational energy and incident angle on H2 adsorption on a defective Pt(111) surface
title_short Quantum dynamics study on the effects of vibration, translational energy and incident angle on H2 adsorption on a defective Pt(111) surface
title_full Quantum dynamics study on the effects of vibration, translational energy and incident angle on H2 adsorption on a defective Pt(111) surface
title_fullStr Quantum dynamics study on the effects of vibration, translational energy and incident angle on H2 adsorption on a defective Pt(111) surface
title_full_unstemmed Quantum dynamics study on the effects of vibration, translational energy and incident angle on H2 adsorption on a defective Pt(111) surface
title_sort quantum dynamics study on the effects of vibration, translational energy and incident angle on h2 adsorption on a defective pt(111) surface
publisher Animo Repository
publishDate 2014
url https://animorepository.dlsu.edu.ph/faculty_research/3822
https://animorepository.dlsu.edu.ph/context/faculty_research/article/4824/type/native/viewcontent/JPSJ.83.124801
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