Thermodynamic Stability of Molybdenum Oxycarbides Formed from Orthorhombic Mo2C in Oxygen-rich Environments
S.R.J. Likith, C. A. Farberow, S. Manna, A. Abdulslam, V., Stevanovi\'c, D. A. Ruddy, J. A. Schaidle, D. J. Robichaud, and C.V. Ciobanu

TL;DR
This study uses density functional theory to analyze the atomic structures and stability of molybdenum oxycarbides formed from orthorhombic Mo2C in oxygen-rich environments, revealing structural changes with oxygen content.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed atomic-level understanding of oxycarbide structures and their stability, advancing knowledge of Mo2C-based catalysts in oxygen-rich conditions.
Findings
Oxygen atoms are unstable under the top Mo layer of Mo2C(100) surface.
Lower oxygen content oxycarbides form layered structures similar to Mo2C.
Higher oxygen content leads to amorphous oxycarbide phases.
Abstract
Molybdenum carbide (Mo2C) nanoparticles and thin films are particularly suitable catalysts for catalytic fast pyrolysis (CFP) as they are effective for deoxygenation and can catalyze certain reactions that typically occur on noble metals. Oxygen deposited during deoxygenation reactions may alter the carbide structure leading to the formation of oxycarbides, which can determine changes in catalytic activity or selectivity. Despite emerging spectroscopic evidence of bulk oxycarbides, so far there have been no reports of their precise atomic structure or their relative stability with respect to orthorhombic Mo2C. This knowledge is essential for assessing the catalytic properties of molybdenum (oxy)carbides for CFP. In this article, we use density functional theory (DFT) calculations to (a) describe the thermodynamic stability of surface and subsurface configurations of oxygen and carbon…
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