Kox, Tim; Spohr, Eckhard; Kenmoe, Stephane:
Impact of Solvation on the Structure and Reactivity of the Co₃O₄ (001)/H₂O Interface : Insights From Molecular Dynamics Simulations
In: Frontiers in Energy Research, Vol. 8 (2020), Article 604799
2020article/chapter in journalOA Gold
ChemistryFaculty of Chemistry » Theoretische ChemieScientific institutes » Center for Computational Sciences and Simulation (CCSS)
Related: 1 publication(s)
Title in English:
Impact of Solvation on the Structure and Reactivity of the Co₃O₄ (001)/H₂O Interface : Insights From Molecular Dynamics Simulations
Author:
Kox, Tim
;
Spohr, EckhardUDE
GND
143257005
LSF ID
49123
ORCID
0000-0001-8148-7575ORCID iD
Other
connected with university
;
Kenmoe, StephaneUDE
GND
1121141544
LSF ID
55953
ORCID
0000-0003-3622-2716ORCID iD
Other
connected with university
Year of publication:
2020
Open Access?:
OA Gold
DuEPublico 2 ID
Web of Science ID
Scopus ID
Note:
OA Förderung 2020
Language of text:
English
Keyword, Topic:
ab initio molecular dynamics ; coordination number, Cobalt oxide, Spinel ; reactivity ; solvation ; surface termination

Abstract in English:

The spinel Co₃O₄ has many beneficial properties for potential use in catalysis. In operando, water is always present and alters the properties of the catalyst. We have used ab initio molecular dynamics to understand the effect of water and solvation on the structure and reactivity of the Co₃O₄ (001) A-type and B-type surface terminations. Water adsorbs on both terminations via a partial dissociative mode, and the A-termination is seen to be more reactive. On this surface, a higher degree of dissociation is observed in the topmost layers of the crystal in contact with water. Water dissociates more frequently on the Co²⁺ sites (about 75%) than on the adjacent Co³⁺ sites, where the degree of dissociation is about 50%. Increasing water coverage does not change the degree of water dissociation significantly. OH− adsorption on the Co²⁺ sites leads to a reduction of the amount of reconstruction and relaxation of the surface relative to the clean surface at room temperature. Proton transfer within the water films and between water molecules and surface has localized character. The B-terminated interface is less dynamic, and water forms epitactic layers on top of the Co³⁺ sites, with a dissociation degree of about 25% in the contact layer.