Surface Science | 2021

CO adsorption on MnO(100): Experimental benchmarks compared to DFT

 
 

Abstract


Abstract CO adsorption on the MnO(100) surface was studied using temperature programmed desorption (TPD) and density functional theory (DFT). TPD results show that CO is weakly-bound on MnO(100), with an experimental adsorption energy of -35.6 ± 2.1 kJ/mol at terrace sites in the low coverage limit. PBE simulations indicate that CO adsorption causes an implausible (2\u202f×\u202f2) surface reconstruction. PBE+U simulations show no signs of surface reconstruction, and provide an accurate estimate of the adsorption energy (-36.4 kJ/mol) when combined with the DFT-D3 method with Becke-Jonson damping to correct for van der Waals interactions. This simulation also shows that CO adsorbs C-down onto the Mn2+ terrace site in a tilted geometry, which is also observed experimentally and computationally on the similarly-structured NiO(100) transition metal oxide surface. TPD results for large doses show a plateauing of the coverage at about 0.4 monolayers of CO at 85 K, with a defect coverage equivalent to 0.08 monolayers. Adsorption associated with defect sites is indicated by a high-temperature desorption tail which is not satisfactorily explained by DFT simulations of simple step or oxygen vacancy defects.

Volume 707
Pages 121808
DOI 10.1016/J.SUSC.2021.121808
Language English
Journal Surface Science

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