Finding Key Factors for Efficient Water and Methanol Activation at Metals, Oxides, MXenes, and Metal/Oxide Interfaces.
Hai-Yan SuKeju SunXiang-Kui GuSha-Sha WangJing ZhuWei-Xue LiChenghua SunFederico Calle-VallejoPublished in: ACS catalysis (2022)
Activating water and methanol is crucial in numerous catalytic, electrocatalytic, and photocatalytic reactions. Despite extensive research, the optimal active sites for water/methanol activation are yet to be unequivocally elucidated. Here, we combine transition-state searches and electronic charge analyses on various structurally different materials to identify two features of favorable O-H bond cleavage in H 2 O, CH 3 OH, and hydroxyl: (1) low barriers appear when the charge of H moieties remains approximately constant during the dissociation process, as observed on metal oxides, MXenes, and metal/oxide interfaces. Such favorable kinetics is closely related to adsorbate/substrate hydrogen bonding and is enhanced by nearly linear O-H-O angles and short O-H distances. (2) Fast dissociation is observed when the rotation of O-H bonds is facile, which is favored by weak adsorbate binding and effective orbital overlap. Interestingly, we find that the two features are energetically proportional. Finally, we find conspicuous differences between H 2 O/CH 3 OH and OH activation, which hints toward the use of carefully engineered interfaces.