Ab initio atomistic thermodynamics and statistical mechanics of surface properties and functions
Karsten Reuter, Catherine Stampfl, Matthias Scheffler

TL;DR
This paper discusses the integration of ab initio electronic structure calculations with statistical mechanics to understand the collective behavior of atomic processes on surfaces, crucial for predictive materials science.
Contribution
It presents emerging methodologies that combine DFT with thermodynamics to analyze the interplay of multiple atomic processes on surfaces.
Findings
Enables description of crystal surfaces in realistic gas environments
Highlights importance of process interplay for material properties
Provides a framework for predictive surface modeling
Abstract
Previous and present "academic" research aiming at atomic scale understanding is mainly concerned with the study of individual molecular processes possibly underlying materials science applications. Appealing properties of an individual process are then frequently discussed in terms of their direct importance for the envisioned material function, or reciprocally, the function of materials is somehow believed to be understandable by essentially one prominent elementary process only. What is often overlooked in this approach is that in macroscopic systems of technological relevance typically a large number of distinct atomic scale processes take place. Which of them are decisive for observable system properties and functions is then not only determined by the detailed individual properties of each process alone, but in many, if not most cases also the interplay of all processes, i.e. how…
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