Abstract
A systematic procedure is introduced for modeling charge-neutral non-polar surfaces of ionic minerals containing polyatomic anions. By integrating distance- and charge-based clustering to identify chemical species within the mineral bulk, our pipeline, PolyCleaver, renders a variety of theoretically viable surface terminations. As a demonstrative example, this approach was applied to forsterite (Mg2SiO4), unveiling a rich interface landscape based on interactions with formaldehyde, a relevant multifaceted molecule, and more particularly in prebiotic chemistry. This high-throughput method, going beyond techniques traditionally applied in the modeling of minerals, offers new insights into the potential catalytic properties of diverse surfaces, enabling a broader exploration of synthetic pathways in complex mineral systems.
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Mates-Torres, E., & Rimola, A. (2024). Unlocking the surface chemistry of ionic minerals: a high-throughput pipeline for modeling realistic interfaces. Journal of Applied Crystallography, 57(Pt 2), 503–508. https://doi.org/10.1107/S1600576724001286
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