electrochemically modeling a non-electrochemical system: hydrogen peroxide direct synthesis on palladium catalysts
Min-Cheol Kim, Sang Soo Han

TL;DR
This study introduces a novel electrochemical DFT model to accurately simulate hydrogen peroxide synthesis on palladium, resolving previous mechanistic controversies and guiding catalyst development.
Contribution
It presents the first theoretical model supporting the heterolytic mechanism for H2O2 production, applicable to non-electrochemical systems with protonation processes.
Findings
The model accurately predicts activation barriers within ~0.1 eV of experimental values.
Heterolytic mechanism favors H2O2 production over H2O due to lower protonation barriers.
Resolves discrepancies between experimental observations and previous DFT calculations.
Abstract
Nonelectrochemical hydrogen peroxide direct synthesis (HPDS) under ambient conditions is an environmentally benign and energy-efficient process that produces a green oxidizer. Despite its industrial importance, the reaction mechanism of HPDS is still controversial, even for the prototypical catalyst Pd. Density functional theory (DFT) calculations with a comprehensive consideration of entropic and solvation effects reveal that the conventionally accepted Langmuir-Hinshelwood mechanism fails to explain why H2O2 production dominates over H2O production, which was experimentally reported. Inspired by the recently suggested heterolytic mechanism that involves electron and proton transfer at Pd catalysts, we propose a new electrochemical DFT model that is applicable for nonelectrochemical systems where a protonation intrinsically occurs. Our model is based on combining the Butler-Volmer…
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Taxonomy
TopicsElectrocatalysts for Energy Conversion · Advanced battery technologies research · CO2 Reduction Techniques and Catalysts
