First-Principles Study on the Molecular Mechanism of Solar-Driven CO Reduction on H-Terminated Si.

ChemSusChem

Hefei National Laboratory for Physical Sciences at the Microscale, University of Science and Technology of China, Hefei, Anhui, 230026, P.R. China.

Published: July 2020

AI Article Synopsis

  • Recent research highlights the potential of using H-terminated silicon for solar-driven conversion of carbon monoxide (CO), but the reaction mechanism is still unclear.
  • A systematic study using first-principles calculations reveals that the formation energies of reaction intermediates depend little on the surface structure, with several pathways for CO conversion explored, including COOH* and direct CO insertion into Si-H and Si-Si bonds.
  • Findings indicate that the most efficient conversion pathway occurs at isolated coordinatively unsaturated silicon sites generated through light or heat, ultimately suggesting improved strategies for designing Si-based catalysts for CO conversion.

Article Abstract

Solar-driven conversion of CO with H-terminated silicon has recently attracted increasing interest. However, the molecular mechanism of the reaction is still not well understood. A systematic study of the mechanism has been carried out with first-principles calculations. The formation energies of the intermediates are found to be insensitive to the structure of the surface. On the fully H-terminated Si(111) surface, several pathways for the conversion of CO into CO at a coordinatively saturated Si site are studied, including the conventional COOH* pathway and the direct insertion of CO into Si-H and Si-Si bonds. Although the barrier of the COOH* pathway is lowest among the three pathways, it is higher than that for OH* elimination, which suggests that CO should be converted by other types of active site. The reaction at the isolated and dual coordinatively unsaturated (CUS) Si sites, which can be generated by light illumination, heat, and Pd loading, are then studied. The results suggest that the most efficient pathway to convert CO is to convert it into CO and O* at an isolated CUS Si site before O* reacts with a terminating H* to form adsorbed OH* and generate new isolated CUS Si sites. Therefore, the CUS Si site catalyzes the reaction until all H* is converted into OH*. The results provide new insight into the mechanism of the reaction and should be helpful for the design of more efficient Si-based catalysts for CO conversion.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/cssc.202000338DOI Listing

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