Heteroatom doping effects on interaction of H2O and CeO2 (111) surfaces studied using density functional theory: Key roles of ionic radius and dispersion.
Kota MurakamiShuhei OgoAtsushi IshikawaYuna TakenoTakuma HigoHideaki TsunekiHiromi NakaiYasushi SekinePublished in: The Journal of chemical physics (2020)
Understanding heteroatom doping effects on the interaction between H2O and cerium oxide (ceria, CeO2) surfaces is crucially important for elucidating heterogeneous catalytic reactions of CeO2-based oxides. Surfaces of CeO2 (111) doped with quadrivalent (Ti, Zr), trivalent (Al, Ga, Sc, Y, La), or divalent (Ca, Sr, Ba) cations are investigated using density functional theory (DFT) calculations modified for onsite Coulomb interactions (DFT + U). Trivalent (except for Al) and divalent cation doping induces the formation of intrinsic oxygen vacancy (Ovac), which is backfilled easily by H2O. Partially OH-terminated surfaces are formed. Furthermore, dissociative adsorption of H2O is simulated on the OH terminated surfaces (for trivalent or divalent cation doped models) and pure surfaces (for Al and quadrivalent cation doped surfaces). The ionic radius is crucially important. In fact, H2O dissociates spontaneously on the small cations. Although a slight change is induced by doping as for the H2O adsorption energy at Ce sites, the H2O dissociative adsorption at Ce sites is well-assisted by dopants with a smaller ionic radius. In terms of the amount of promoted Ce sites, the arrangement of dopant sites is also fundamentally important.