Bulk-surface relationship of an electronic structure for high-throughput screening of metal oxide catalysts

•Bulk-surface relationship was predicted by the ligand field nature of metal oxides.•Antibonding and bonding d-bands occupancy clarified the bulk-surface relationship.•Different surface relaxations were explained by the bulk electronic structures.•Transition from the bulk to the surface state was si...

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Veröffentlicht in:Applied surface science 2016-05, Vol.370, p.279-290
Hauptverfasser: Kweun, Joshua Minwoo, Li, Chenzhe, Zheng, Yongping, Cho, Maenghyo, Kim, Yoon Young, Cho, Kyeongjae
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:•Bulk-surface relationship was predicted by the ligand field nature of metal oxides.•Antibonding and bonding d-bands occupancy clarified the bulk-surface relationship.•Different surface relaxations were explained by the bulk electronic structures.•Transition from the bulk to the surface state was simulated by oxygen adsorption. Designing metal-oxides consisting of earth-abundant elements has been a crucial issue to replace precious metal catalysts. To achieve efficient screening of metal-oxide catalysts via bulk descriptors rather than surface descriptors, we investigated the relationship between the electronic structure of bulk and that of the surface for lanthanum-based perovskite oxides, LaMO3 (M=Ti, V, Cr, Mn, Fe, Co, Ni, Cu). Through density functional theory calculations, we examined the d-band occupancy of the bulk and surface transition-metal atoms (nBulk and nSurf) and the adsorption energy of an oxygen atom (Eads) on (001), (110), and (111) surfaces. For the (001) surface, we observed strong correlation between the nBulk and nSurf with an R-squared value over 94%, and the result was interpreted in terms of ligand field splitting and antibonding/bonding level splitting. Moreover, the Eads on the surfaces was highly correlated with the nBulk with an R-squared value of more than 94%, and different surface relaxations could be explained by the bulk electronic structure (e.g., LaMnO3 vs. LaTiO3). These results suggest that a bulk-derived descriptor such as nBulk can be used to screen metal-oxide catalysts.
ISSN:0169-4332
1873-5584
DOI:10.1016/j.apsusc.2016.02.093