November 27, 2012
Journal Article

Quantum Tunneling Enabled Self-Assembly of Hydrogen Atoms on Cu(111)

Abstract

Atomic and molecular self-assembly are key phenomena that underpin many important technologies. Typically, thermally enabled diffusion allows a system to sample many areas of configurational space, and ordered assemblies evolve that optimize interactions between species. Herein we describe a system in which the diffusion is quantum tunneling in nature and report the self-assembly of H atoms on a Cu(111) surface into complex arrays based on local clustering followed by larger scale islanding of these clusters. By scanning tunneling microscope tip-induced scrambling of H atom assemblies, we are able to watch the atomic scale details of H atom self-assembly in real time. The ordered arrangements we observe are complex and very different from those formed by H on other metals that occur in much simpler geometries. We contrast the diffusion and assembly of H with D, which has a much slower tunneling rate and is not able to form the large islands observed with H over equivalent time scales. Using density functional theory, we examine the interaction of H atoms on Cu(111) by calculating the differential binding energy as a function of H coverage. At the temperature of the experiments (5 K), H(D) diffusion by quantum tunneling dominates. The quantum-tunneling-enabled H and D diffusion is studied using a semiclassically corrected transition state theory coupled with density functional theory. This system constitutes the first example of quantum-tunneling-enabled self-assembly, while simultaneously demonstrating the complex ordering of H on Cu(111), a catalytically relevant surface.

Revised: January 14, 2014 | Published: November 27, 2012

Citation

Jewell A.D., G. Peng, M.F. Mattera, E.A. Lewis, C.J. Murphy, G. Kyriakou, and M. Mavrikakis, et al. 2012. Quantum Tunneling Enabled Self-Assembly of Hydrogen Atoms on Cu(111). ACS Nano 6, no. 11:10115-10121. doi:10.1021/nn3038463