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Quantum effects in thermal reaction rates at metal surfaces.

Dmitriy BorodinNils HertlG Barratt ParkMichael SchwarzerJan FingerhutYingqi WangJunxiang ZuoFlorian NitzGeorgios SkoulatakisAlexander KandratsenkaDaniel J AuerbachDirk SchwarzerHua GuoTheofanis N KitsopoulosAlec M Wodtke
Published in: Science (New York, N.Y.) (2022)
There is wide interest in developing accurate theories for predicting rates of chemical reactions that occur at metal surfaces, especially for applications in industrial catalysis. Conventional methods contain many approximations that lack experimental validation. In practice, there are few reactions where sufficiently accurate experimental data exist to even allow meaningful comparisons to theory. Here, we present experimentally derived thermal rate constants for hydrogen atom recombination on platinum single-crystal surfaces, which are accurate enough to test established theoretical approximations. A quantum rate model is also presented, making possible a direct evaluation of the accuracy of commonly used approximations to adsorbate entropy. We find that neglecting the wave nature of adsorbed hydrogen atoms and their electronic spin degeneracy leads to a 10× to 1000× overestimation of the rate constant for temperatures relevant to heterogeneous catalysis. These quantum effects are also found to be important for nanoparticle catalysts.
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