Polarising Ability of the Metal Surface Atoms of a Catalyst and the Work Function

An attempt was made to determine the polarising ability of metal surface atoms. On the basis of an analysis of the metal cohesive energy and the electron binding energy in ionic cores, a new parameter was proposed called the polarising ability of surface atoms as defined by the equation: P surf = (...

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Main Authors: Andrzej Stokłosa, Stefan S. Kurek, Barbara Laskowska
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Hindawi - SAGE Publishing 2004-11-01
Series:Adsorption Science & Technology
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1260/0263617043026532
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spelling doaj-7d5c48899dd64d02a6868275494552bb2021-04-02T13:36:43ZengHindawi - SAGE PublishingAdsorption Science & Technology0263-61742048-40382004-11-012210.1260/0263617043026532Polarising Ability of the Metal Surface Atoms of a Catalyst and the Work FunctionAndrzej StokłosaStefan S. KurekBarbara LaskowskaAn attempt was made to determine the polarising ability of metal surface atoms. On the basis of an analysis of the metal cohesive energy and the electron binding energy in ionic cores, a new parameter was proposed called the polarising ability of surface atoms as defined by the equation: P surf = ( α Δ G subM 0 E EBE ) 1 / 2 / R r / a o where E EBE denotes the electron binding energy at the outermost shell of the ionic core, the product (αδG 0 sub ) determines the surface Gibbs energy that is proportional (the quantity α denoting the proportionality factor) to the standard Gibbs energy of sublimation of the metal (δG 0 subM ), r is the metallic radius (half the length of the metallic bond), a o is the radius of the first Bohr orbit and R is the Rydberg constant. It was shown that the above parameter is proportional to the work function and that, in a similar fashion to the ionisation energy of ions, this can indicate the polarising ability of the surface atoms. The correlation between the polarising ability parameter and the initial heat of adsorption of H 2 , O 2 , CO and N 2 , and between the limiting exchange current (log i o ) of the hydrogen evolution on metals, was demonstrated.https://doi.org/10.1260/0263617043026532
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Andrzej Stokłosa
Stefan S. Kurek
Barbara Laskowska
spellingShingle Andrzej Stokłosa
Stefan S. Kurek
Barbara Laskowska
Polarising Ability of the Metal Surface Atoms of a Catalyst and the Work Function
Adsorption Science & Technology
author_facet Andrzej Stokłosa
Stefan S. Kurek
Barbara Laskowska
author_sort Andrzej Stokłosa
title Polarising Ability of the Metal Surface Atoms of a Catalyst and the Work Function
title_short Polarising Ability of the Metal Surface Atoms of a Catalyst and the Work Function
title_full Polarising Ability of the Metal Surface Atoms of a Catalyst and the Work Function
title_fullStr Polarising Ability of the Metal Surface Atoms of a Catalyst and the Work Function
title_full_unstemmed Polarising Ability of the Metal Surface Atoms of a Catalyst and the Work Function
title_sort polarising ability of the metal surface atoms of a catalyst and the work function
publisher Hindawi - SAGE Publishing
series Adsorption Science & Technology
issn 0263-6174
2048-4038
publishDate 2004-11-01
description An attempt was made to determine the polarising ability of metal surface atoms. On the basis of an analysis of the metal cohesive energy and the electron binding energy in ionic cores, a new parameter was proposed called the polarising ability of surface atoms as defined by the equation: P surf = ( α Δ G subM 0 E EBE ) 1 / 2 / R r / a o where E EBE denotes the electron binding energy at the outermost shell of the ionic core, the product (αδG 0 sub ) determines the surface Gibbs energy that is proportional (the quantity α denoting the proportionality factor) to the standard Gibbs energy of sublimation of the metal (δG 0 subM ), r is the metallic radius (half the length of the metallic bond), a o is the radius of the first Bohr orbit and R is the Rydberg constant. It was shown that the above parameter is proportional to the work function and that, in a similar fashion to the ionisation energy of ions, this can indicate the polarising ability of the surface atoms. The correlation between the polarising ability parameter and the initial heat of adsorption of H 2 , O 2 , CO and N 2 , and between the limiting exchange current (log i o ) of the hydrogen evolution on metals, was demonstrated.
url https://doi.org/10.1260/0263617043026532
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