Abstract
A chemicurrent is a flux of fast (kinetic energy ≳ 0.5-1.3 eV) metal electrons caused by moderately exothermic (1-3 eV) chemical reactions over high work function (4-6 eV) metal surfaces. In this report, the relation between chemicurrent and surface chemistry is elucidated with a combination of top-down phenomenology and bottom-up atomic-scale modeling. Examination of catalytic CO oxidation, an example which exhibits a chemicurrent, reveals 3 constituents of this relation: The localization of some conduction electrons to the surface via a reduction reaction, 0.5O2 + δe- → O δ- (Red); the delocalization of some surface electrons into a conduction band in an oxidation reaction, Oδ- + CO → CO2δ- → CO2 + δe- (Ox); and relaxation without charge transfer (Rel). Juxtaposition of Red, Ox, and Rel produces a daunting variety of metal electronic excitations, but only those that originate from CO2 reactive desorption are long-range and fast enough to dominate the chemicurrent. The chemicurrent yield depends on the universality class of the desorption process and the distribution of the desorption thresholds. This analysis implies a power-law relation with exponent 2.66 between the chemicurrent and the heat of adsorption, which is consistent with experimental findings for a range of systems. This picture also applies to other oxidation-reduction reactions over high work function metal surfaces.
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Maximoff, S. N., & Head-Gordon, M. P. (2009). Chemistry of fast electrons. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 106(28), 11460–11465. https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.0902030106
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