Many-body dispersion effects in the binding of adsorbates on metal surfaces
Reinhard J. Maurer, Victor G. Ruiz, Alexandre Tkatchenko

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates that many-body dispersion effects are crucial for accurately modeling the binding of various adsorbates on metal surfaces, improving predictions over pairwise methods.
Contribution
It introduces the application of the many-body dispersion (MBD) approach within density-functional theory to better describe adsorbate-metal interactions.
Findings
MBD improves adsorption energy predictions.
MBD captures anisotropic polarizability changes.
MBD reduces overbinding in adsorption geometries.
Abstract
A correct description of electronic exchange and correlation effects for molecules in contact with extended (metal) surfaces is a challenging task for first-principles modeling. In this work we demonstrate the importance of collective van der Waals dispersion effects beyond the pairwise approximation for organic--inorganic systems on the example of atoms, molecules, and nanostructures adsorbed on metals. We use the recently developed many-body dispersion (MBD) approach in the context of density-functional theory [Phys. Rev. Lett. 108, 236402 (2012); J. Chem. Phys. 140, 18A508 (2014)] and assess its ability to correctly describe the binding of adsorbates on metal surfaces. We briefly review the MBD method and highlight its similarities to quantum-chemical approaches to electron correlation in a quasiparticle picture. In particular, we study the binding properties of xenon,…
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