Chemical Reactivity of Supported ZnO Clusters: Undercoordinated Zinc and Oxygen Atoms as Active Sites.
Xiaojuan YuJannik P RothJunjun WangEric SauterAlexei NefedovStefan HeißlerGianfranco PacchioniYuemin WangChristof WöllPublished in: Chemphyschem : a European journal of chemical physics and physical chemistry (2020)
The growth of ZnO clusters supported by ZnO-bilayers on Ag(111) and the interaction of these oxide nanostructures with water have been studied by a multi-technique approach combining temperature-dependent infrared reflection absorption spectroscopy (IRRAS), grazing-emission X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy, and density functional theory calculations. Our results reveal that the ZnO bilayers exhibiting graphite-like structure are chemically inactive for water dissociation, whereas small ZnO clusters formed on top of these well-defined, yet chemically passive supports show extremely high reactivity - water is dissociated without an apparent activation barrier. Systematic isotopic substitution experiments using H2 16 O/D2 16 O/D2 18 O allow identification of various types of acidic hydroxyl groups. We demonstrate that a reliable characterization of these OH-species is possible via co-adsorption of CO, which leads to a red shift of the OD frequency due to the weak interaction via hydrogen bonding. The theoretical results provide atomic-level insight into the surface structure and chemical activity of the supported ZnO clusters and allow identification of the presence of under-coordinated Zn and O atoms at the edges and corners of the ZnO clusters as the active sites for H2 O dissociation.
Keyphrases
- quantum dots
- room temperature
- density functional theory
- visible light
- reduced graphene oxide
- high resolution
- molecular dynamics simulations
- molecular dynamics
- ionic liquid
- gold nanoparticles
- magnetic resonance imaging
- risk assessment
- gene expression
- solid state
- dna methylation
- diffusion weighted imaging
- genetic diversity