Carbon dioxide adsorption and activation on Ceria (110): A density functional theory study
Zhuo Cheng, Brent J. Sherman, Cynthia S. Lo

TL;DR
This study uses density functional theory to investigate how CO2 adsorbs and activates on reduced CeO2 (110) surfaces, revealing favored adsorption near oxygen vacancies and initial steps toward reduction.
Contribution
It provides detailed insights into CO2 adsorption configurations and activation mechanisms on reduced CeO2 (110), highlighting the role of oxygen vacancies in catalytic processes.
Findings
CO2 prefers adsorption near oxygen vacancies on reduced CeO2 (110)
Adsorbed CO2 adopts a bent, unidentate carbonate configuration
Charge transfer to CO2 initiates activation and reduction steps
Abstract
Ceria (CeO2) is a promising catalyst for the reduction of carbon dioxide (CO2) to liquid fuels and commodity chemicals, in part because of its high oxygen storage capacity, yet the fundamentals of CO2 adsorption and initial activation on CeO2 surfaces remain largely unknown. We use density functional theory, corrected for onsite Coulombic interactions (DFT+U), to explore various adsorption sites and configurations for CO2 on stoichiometric and reduced CeO2 (110). Our model of reduced CeO2 (110) contains oxygen vacancies at the topmost atomic layer and undergoes surface reconstruction upon introduction of these vacancies. We find that CO2 adsorption on reduced CeO2 (110) is thermodynamically favored over the corresponding adsorption on stoichiometric CeO2 (110). The most stable adsorption configuration consists of CO2 adsorbed parallel to the reduced CeO2 (110) surface, with the molecule…
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