The measured low initial sticking probability of oxygen molecules at the Al(111) surface that had puzzled the field for many years was recently explained in a nonadiabatic picture invoking spin-selection rules. These selection rules tend to conserve the initial spin-triplet character of the free O2 molecule during the molecule's approach to the surface. A locally constrained density-functional theory approach gave access to the corresponding potential-energy surface (PES) seen by such an impinging spin-triplet molecule and indicated barriers to dissociation which reduce the sticking probability. Here, we further substantiate this nonadiabatic picture by providing a detailed account of the employed approach. Building on the previous work, we focus, in particular, on inaccuracies in present-day exchange-correlation functionals. Our analysis shows that small quantitative differences in the spin-triplet constrained PES obtained with different gradient-corrected functionals have a noticeable effect on the lowest kinetic energy part of the resulting sticking curve. © 2008 The American Physical Society.
CITATION STYLE
Behler, J., Reuter, K., & Scheffler, M. (2008). Nonadiabatic effects in the dissociation of oxygen molecules at the Al(111) surface. Physical Review B - Condensed Matter and Materials Physics, 77(11). https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevB.77.115421
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