Thursday 5 February 2009 at 15:00
J. Redinger
(University of Technology, Vienna)
Halogens on Pt(110): From quasi-1D phases to the onset of corrosion
through a DFT looking glass
Abstract:
State-of-the-art ab-initio methods have matured to a complete
tool-box for structure determination rivaling present-day experimental
methods with respect to precision and reliability as corroborated
by DFT calculations for the halogen/platinum adsorption system.
Br adsorbed on the strongly anisotropic Pt(110) surface forms
a sequence of (n×1) structures, where Br is found in bridge sites
on and between the close packed Pt rows. The preference for one
site over the other could be explained by assuming short-range
interactions, where adsorbate-adsorbate interactions mediated
by quasi-one-dimensional surface resonances play an important
role. From a technological point of view, the interaction of
halogens with platinum surfaces is an extremely interesting
problem, because halogens serve as platinum mobilizers in both,
deposition and corrosion processes. [PtCl4]2-
deposition from
an electrolyte followed by reduction to metallic Pt clusters
is a way to obtain highly dispersed catalytically active Pt
surfaces. Interestingly, a dry deposition of Cl2 in vacuo on
the initially clean Pt(110) surface yields an almost identical
array of Cl and PtCl4 as the direct deposition of
[PtCl4]2-,
which indicates that the highly-ordered Cl/PtCl4/metal system
forms an universal transition state in both, erosion and deposition.
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