Density functional theory study of adsorption of H2O on γ-U(110) surface

被引:1
作者
Zhu, S-L [1 ]
Yang, Y-X [1 ]
Zhang, Z-F [1 ]
Liu, X-H [1 ]
Tian, X-F [1 ]
Yu, Y. [2 ]
Li, D. [1 ]
机构
[1] Chengdu Univ Technol, Coll Nucl Technol & Automat Engn, Chengdu 610000, Sichuan, Peoples R China
[2] Chengdu Univ Informat Technol, Coll Optoelect Technol, Chengdu 610000, Sichuan, Peoples R China
基金
中国国家自然科学基金;
关键词
Adsorption; Water molecular; gamma-U(110); Dissociation; DFT calculations; WATER-VAPOR; INITIAL-STAGES; URANIUM; OXIDATION; SPECTROSCOPY; O-2;
D O I
10.1007/s12648-023-02589-z
中图分类号
O4 [物理学];
学科分类号
0702 ;
摘要
The adsorption and dissociation of H2O on gamma-U(110) surface have been studied using density functional theory calculations. For molecular adsorption, the water molecules prefer to be adsorbed parallelly on the top site. The adsorption energy of 2.06 eV and charge transfer between H2O and the surface suggest that chemical adsorption has taken place. The hybridization between 6d orbitals of surface uranium and 2p orbitals of oxygen in H2O plays a dominant role in the chemical adsorption model. Compared with molecular adsorptions, the H2O in gamma-U(110) surface was found to be more prone to dissociative adsorptions. The adsorbed H2O can easily dissociate into OH and H with an energy barrier of 0.37 eV and the reaction is exothermic by 1.73 eV. Moreover, the OH group, perpendicular to the surface, can furtherly dissociate into H and O with a 0.57 eV energy barrier and the reaction is exothermic by 1.2 eV. The dissociation of H2O is highly exothermic and the dissociation barrier is significantly lower than the adsorption energy, indicating that H2O easily dissociates on the gamma-U(110) surface.
引用
收藏
页码:2297 / 2306
页数:10
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [41] Water Adsorption on AnO2 {111}, {110}, and {100} Surfaces (An = U and Pu): A Density Functional Theory plus U Study
    Tegner, Bengt E.
    Molinari, Marco
    Kerridge, Andrew
    Parker, Stephen C.
    Kaltsoyannis, Nikolas
    JOURNAL OF PHYSICAL CHEMISTRY C, 2017, 121 (03) : 1675 - 1682
  • [42] Study of H2O and HOCH2CH2OH Adsorption on the Relaxation Surface of β-Si3N4(0001) by Density Functional Theory
    Peng Xin-Yu
    Wang Xue-Ye
    Wang Ling
    Tan Yuan-Qiang
    CHINESE JOURNAL OF STRUCTURAL CHEMISTRY, 2008, 27 (12) : 1439 - 1444
  • [43] Study of H2O and HOCH2CH2OH Adsorption on the Relaxation Surface of β-Si3N4(0001) by Density Functional Theory
    彭新宇
    王学业
    王玲
    谭援强
    结构化学, 2008, 27 (12) : 1439 - 1444
  • [44] Pt adsorption on the PbTiO3(110) polar surface: A density functional theory study
    Pang, Qing
    Zhang, Jian-Min
    Xu, Ke-Wei
    Ji, Vincent
    SURFACE AND INTERFACE ANALYSIS, 2009, 41 (10) : 785 - 793
  • [45] DFT study of H2O adsorption on TiO2 (110) and SnO2 (110) surfaces
    Sahoo, Suman Kalyan
    Nigam, Sandeep
    Sarkar, Pranab
    Majumder, Chiranjib
    SOLID STATE PHYSICS, VOL 57, 2013, 1512 : 292 - 293
  • [46] Density functional theory calculations of surface properties and H2 adsorption on the Cu2O (111) surface
    Li, Min
    Zhang, Jun-ying
    Zhang, Yue
    Zhang, Guo-feng
    Wang, Tian-min
    APPLIED SURFACE SCIENCE, 2011, 257 (24) : 10710 - 10714
  • [47] Density functional theory study on the decomposition mechanism of HFC-32 on a Cu(111) surface: The impact of H2O and O2
    Bai, Mengna
    Chen, Jiu
    Feng, Zhitao
    Sun, Yanyan
    Hu, Yingyuan
    Zhao, Xin
    JOURNAL OF MOLECULAR LIQUIDS, 2022, 348
  • [48] Solvent effects for CO and H2 adsorption on Cu2O (111) surface: A density functional theory study
    Zuo, Zhijun
    Huang, Wei
    Han, Peide
    Li, Zhihong
    APPLIED SURFACE SCIENCE, 2010, 256 (08) : 2357 - 2362
  • [49] A density functional theory study on the adsorption of CO and O2 on Cu-terminated Cu2O (111) surface
    Li Min
    Zhang Jun-Ying
    Zhang Yue
    Wang Tian-Min
    CHINESE PHYSICS B, 2012, 21 (06)
  • [50] Density Functional Study of the Properties of CO Adsorption on SnO2(110) Surface
    Xue Yan-Bing
    Tang Zhen-An
    CHEMICAL JOURNAL OF CHINESE UNIVERSITIES-CHINESE, 2009, 30 (03): : 583 - 587