Timmer, Matthias; Kratzer, Peter:
Electron-hole spectra created by adsorption on metals from density functional theory
In: Physical Review B : Condensed matter and materials physics, Vol. 79 (2009), No. 16, p. 165407
2009article/chapter in journalOA Green
Physics (incl. Astronomy)Scientific institutes » Center for Nanointegration Duisburg-Essen (CENIDE)
Related: 1 publication(s)
Title in English:
Electron-hole spectra created by adsorption on metals from density functional theory
Author:
Timmer, MatthiasUDE
LSF ID
48412
Other
connected with university
;
Kratzer, PeterUDE
GND
105650420
LSF ID
14826
ORCID
0000-0001-5947-1366ORCID iD
ORCID
0000-0003-4790-4616ORCID iD
Other
connected with university
Year of publication:
2009
Open Access?:
OA Green
arXiv.org ID
Language of text:
English

Abstract:

Nonadiabaticity in adsorption on metal surfaces gives rise to a number of measurable effects such as chemicurrents and exoelectron emission. Here we present a quantitative theory of chemicurrents on the basis of ground-state density functional theory (DFT) calculations of the effective electronic potential and the Kohn-Sham band structure. Excitation probabilities are calculated both for electron-hole pairs and for electrons and holes separately from first-order time-dependent perturbation theory. This is accomplished by evaluating the matrix elements (between Kohn-Sham states) of the rate of change of the effective electronic potential between subsequent (static) DFT calculations. Our approach is related to the theory of electronic friction, but allows for direct access to the excitation spectra. The method is applied to adsorption of atomic hydrogen isotopes on the Al(111) surface. The results are compatible with the available experimental data (for noble metal surfaces); in particular, the observed isotope effect in H versus D adsorption is described by the present theory. Moreover, the results are in qualitative agreement with computationally elaborate calculations of the full dynamics within time-dependent density functional theory, with the notable exception of effects due to the spin dynamics. Being a perturbational approach, the method proposed here is simple enough to be applied to a wide class of adsorbates and surfaces, while at the same time allowing us to extract system-specific information.