Spin-dependent reactivity and spin-flipping dynamics in O atom scattering from graphite
ORAL
Abstract
The formation of two-electron chemical bonds requires the alignment of spins; hence, it is well established for gas phase reactions that changing a molecule's electronic spin-state can dramatically alter its reactivity. For reactions occurring at surfaces, which are of great interest to, among others, heterogeneous catalysis, there is an absence of definitive state-to-state experiments capable of observing spin conservation and the role of electronic spin in surface chemistry remains controversial. Here, we use a novel incoming/outoing correlation ion-imaging technique to perform scattering experiments for O(3P) and O(1D) atoms colliding at a graphite surface, in which the initial spin-state distribution is controlled and the final spin-states determined. We demonstrate O(1D) is much more reactive with graphite than O(3P). We also identify electronically nonadiabatic pathways whereby incident O(1D) is quenched to O(3P) that departs from the surface. With the help of molecular dynamics simulations carried out on high dimensional machine learning assisted first principles potential energy surfaces, we obtain a mechanistic understanding for this system: spin-forbidden transitions do occur, but with low probabilities.
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Publication: Zibo Zhao, Yingqi Wang, Ximei Yang, Jiamei Quan, Bastian C. Krüger, Paula Stoicescu, Reed Nieman, Daniel J. Auerbach, Alec M. Wodtke, Hua Guo, G. Barratt Park. Spin-dependent reactivity and spin-flipping dynamics in O atom scattering from graphite. Submitted (2022).
Presenters
Barratt Park
Texas Tech University
Authors
Barratt Park
Texas Tech University
Zibo Zhao
Max Planck Institute for Multidisciplinary Sciences
Yingqi Wang
University of New Mexico
Ximei Yang
Max Planck Institute for Multidisciplinary Sciences
Jiamei Quan
Max Planck Institute for Multidisciplinary Sciences
Bastian C Krüger
Max Planck Institute for Multidisciplinary Sciences
Paula Stoicescu
Georg-August University of Goettingen
Reed Nieman
University of New Mexico
Daniel J Auerbach
Max Planck Institute for Biophysical Che
Alec M Wodtke
Max Planck Institute for Dynamics and Self-Organization