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RESEARCH PRODUCT
Adsorption dynamics of molecular nitrogen at an Fe(111) surface.
M. A. NosirM. A. NosirG. A. BocanR. Díez MuiñoR. Díez MuiñoL. Martin-gondresubject
DYNAMICSADSORPTIONCiencias FísicasAb initioGeneral Physics and AstronomyThermodynamics02 engineering and technologyTrapping01 natural sciencesMolecular dynamicsAdsorption0103 physical sciencesN2/Fe(111)Physical and Theoretical Chemistry010306 general physicsComputingMilieux_MISCELLANEOUS[PHYS]Physics [physics]Range (particle radiation)ChemistrySURFACES021001 nanoscience & nanotechnologyThreshold energyAstronomíaPotential energy surfaceDensity functional theoryAtomic physics0210 nano-technologyCIENCIAS NATURALES Y EXACTASdescription
We present an extensive theoretical study of N adsorption mechanisms on an Fe(111) surface. We combine the static analysis of a six-dimensional potential energy surface (6D-PES), based on ab initio density functional theory (DFT) calculations for the system, with quasi-classical trajectory (QCT) calculations to simulate the adsorption dynamics. There are four molecular adsorption states, usually called γ, δ, α, and ε, arising from our DFT calculations. We find that N adsorption in the γ-state is non-activated, while the threshold energy is associated with the entrance channel for the other three adsorption states. Our QCT calculations confirm that there are activated and nonactivated paths for the adsorption of N on the Fe(111) surface, which is in agreement with previous experimental investigations. Molecular dynamics at a surface temperature T = 300 K and impact energies E in the 0-5 eV range show the relative occupancy of the γ, δ, α, and ε states. The δ-state, however, is only marginally populated despite its adsorption energy being very similar to that of the γ-state. Our QCT calculations trace the dependence of molecular trapping on the surface temperature T and initial impact energy E and quantify the rates of the different competitive channels that eventually lead to molecular adsorption.
year | journal | country | edition | language |
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2017-01-01 | Physical chemistry chemical physics : PCCP |