The research described in this product was performed in part in the Environmental Molecular Sciences Laboratory, a national scientific user facility sponsored by the Department of Energy's Office of Biological and Environmental Research and located at Pacific Northwest National Laboratory. Density functional theory is used to explore the energy landscape of Pd atoms adsorbed on the terrace of MgO(10 0) and at oxygen
vacancy sites. Saddle point finding methods reveal that small Pd clusters diffuse on the terrace in interesting ways. The monomer and
dimer diffuse via single atom hops between oxygen sites with barriers of 0.34 eV and 0.43 eV respectively. The trimer and tetramer, however,
form 3D clusters by overcoming a 2D–3D transition barrier of less than 60 meV. The trimer diffuses along the surface either by a
walking or flipping motion, with comparable barriers of ca. 0.5 eV. The tetramer rolls along the terrace with a lower barrier of 0.42 eV.
Soft rotational modes at the saddle point lead to an anomalously high prefactor of 1.3 · 1014 s!1 for tetramer diffusion. This prefactor is
two order of magnitude higher than for monomer diffusion, making the tetramer the fastest diffusing species on the terrace at all temperatures
for which diffusion is active (above 200 K). Neutral oxygen vacancy sites are found to bind Pd monomers with a 2.63 eV stronger
binding energy than the terrace. A second Pd atom, however, binds to this trapped monomer with a smaller energy of 0.56 eV, so that
dimers at defects dissociate on a time scale of milliseconds at room temperature. Larger clusters bind more strongly at defects. Trimers
and tetramers dissociate from monomer-bound-defects at elevated temperatures of ca. 600 K. These species are also mobile on the
terrace, suggesting they are important for the ripening observed at P600 K during Pd vapor deposition on MgO(100) by Haas et al.
[G. Haas, A. Menck, H. Brune, J.V. Barth, J.A. Venables, K. Kern, Phys. Rev. B 61 (2000) 11105].
Revised: April 7, 2011 |
Published: February 9, 2006
Citation
Xu L., G.A. Henkelman, C.T. Campbell, and H. Jonsson. 2006.Pd Diffusion on MgO(100): The Role of Defects and Small Cluster Mobilit.Surface Science 600.