Water adsorption on metal surfaces: A general picture from density functional theory studies
Journal article, 2004

We present a density functional theory study of water adsorption on metal surfaces. Prototype water structures including monomers, clusters, one-dimensional chains, and overlayers have been investigated in detail on a model system-a Pt(111) surface. The structure, energetics, and vibrational spectra are all obtained and compared with available experimental data. This study is further extended to other metal surfaces including Ru(0001), Rh(111), Pd(111), and Au(111), where adsorption of monomers and bilayers has been investigated. From these studies, a general picture has emerged regarding the water-surface interaction, the interwater hydrogen bonding, and the wetting order of the metal surfaces. The water-surface interaction is dominated by the lone pair-d band coupling through the surface states. It is rather localized in the contacting layer. A simultaneous enhancement of hydrogen bonding is generally observed in many adsorbed structures. Some special issues such as the partial dissociation of water on Ru(0001) and in the RT39 bilayer phase, the H-up and H-down conversion, and the quantum-mechanical motions of H atoms are also discussed.

WAVE BASIS-SET

MOLECULAR-DYNAMICS SIMULATIONS

PARTIAL DISSOCIATION

HYDROGEN-BONDED SYSTEMS

ENERGY ELECTRON-DIFFRACTION

PT(111) SURFACE

ICE FILMS

CLUSTERS

H2O

VIBRATIONAL-SPECTRA

Author

Sheng Meng

Chalmers, Applied Physics, Materials and Surface Theory

Enge Wang

Shiwu Gao

University of Gothenburg

Physical Review B

Vol. 69 19 195404-

Subject Categories

Condensed Matter Physics

DOI

10.1103/PhysRevB.69.195404

More information

Created

10/8/2017