Nuclear conversion theory: molecular hydrogen in non-magnetic insulators

The hydrogen conversion patterns on non-magnetic solids sensitively depend upon the degree of singlet/triplet mixing in the intermediates of the catalytic reaction. Three main ‘symmetry-breaking’ interactions are brought together. In a typical channel, the electron spin–orbit (SO) couplings introduc...

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Main Authors: Ernest Ilisca, Filippo Ghiglieno
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: The Royal Society 2016-01-01
Series:Royal Society Open Science
Subjects:
Online Access:https://royalsocietypublishing.org/doi/pdf/10.1098/rsos.160042
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spelling doaj-b81ca04cb35a4ab8a66922c1969f4f262020-11-25T03:06:08ZengThe Royal SocietyRoyal Society Open Science2054-57032016-01-013910.1098/rsos.160042160042Nuclear conversion theory: molecular hydrogen in non-magnetic insulatorsErnest IliscaFilippo GhiglienoThe hydrogen conversion patterns on non-magnetic solids sensitively depend upon the degree of singlet/triplet mixing in the intermediates of the catalytic reaction. Three main ‘symmetry-breaking’ interactions are brought together. In a typical channel, the electron spin–orbit (SO) couplings introduce some magnetic excitations in the non-magnetic solid ground state. The electron spin is exchanged with a molecular one by the electric molecule–solid electron repulsion, mixing the bonding and antibonding states and affecting the molecule rotation. Finally, the magnetic hyperfine contact transfers the electron spin angular momentum to the nuclei. Two families of channels are considered and a simple criterion based on the SO coupling strength is proposed to select the most efficient one. The denoted ‘electronic’ conversion path involves an emission of excitons that propagate and disintegrate in the bulk. In the other denoted ‘nuclear’, the excited electron states are transients of a loop, and the electron system returns to its fundamental ground state. The described model enlarges previous studies by extending the electron basis to charge-transfer states and ‘continui’ of band states, and focuses on the broadening of the antibonding molecular excited state by the solid conduction band that provides efficient tunnelling paths for the hydrogen conversion. After working out the general conversion algebra, the conversion rates of hydrogen on insulating and semiconductor solids are related to a few molecule–solid parameters (gap width, ionization and affinity potentials) and compared with experimental measures.https://royalsocietypublishing.org/doi/pdf/10.1098/rsos.160042hydrogensurfacesinsulators
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Ernest Ilisca
Filippo Ghiglieno
spellingShingle Ernest Ilisca
Filippo Ghiglieno
Nuclear conversion theory: molecular hydrogen in non-magnetic insulators
Royal Society Open Science
hydrogen
surfaces
insulators
author_facet Ernest Ilisca
Filippo Ghiglieno
author_sort Ernest Ilisca
title Nuclear conversion theory: molecular hydrogen in non-magnetic insulators
title_short Nuclear conversion theory: molecular hydrogen in non-magnetic insulators
title_full Nuclear conversion theory: molecular hydrogen in non-magnetic insulators
title_fullStr Nuclear conversion theory: molecular hydrogen in non-magnetic insulators
title_full_unstemmed Nuclear conversion theory: molecular hydrogen in non-magnetic insulators
title_sort nuclear conversion theory: molecular hydrogen in non-magnetic insulators
publisher The Royal Society
series Royal Society Open Science
issn 2054-5703
publishDate 2016-01-01
description The hydrogen conversion patterns on non-magnetic solids sensitively depend upon the degree of singlet/triplet mixing in the intermediates of the catalytic reaction. Three main ‘symmetry-breaking’ interactions are brought together. In a typical channel, the electron spin–orbit (SO) couplings introduce some magnetic excitations in the non-magnetic solid ground state. The electron spin is exchanged with a molecular one by the electric molecule–solid electron repulsion, mixing the bonding and antibonding states and affecting the molecule rotation. Finally, the magnetic hyperfine contact transfers the electron spin angular momentum to the nuclei. Two families of channels are considered and a simple criterion based on the SO coupling strength is proposed to select the most efficient one. The denoted ‘electronic’ conversion path involves an emission of excitons that propagate and disintegrate in the bulk. In the other denoted ‘nuclear’, the excited electron states are transients of a loop, and the electron system returns to its fundamental ground state. The described model enlarges previous studies by extending the electron basis to charge-transfer states and ‘continui’ of band states, and focuses on the broadening of the antibonding molecular excited state by the solid conduction band that provides efficient tunnelling paths for the hydrogen conversion. After working out the general conversion algebra, the conversion rates of hydrogen on insulating and semiconductor solids are related to a few molecule–solid parameters (gap width, ionization and affinity potentials) and compared with experimental measures.
topic hydrogen
surfaces
insulators
url https://royalsocietypublishing.org/doi/pdf/10.1098/rsos.160042
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AT filippoghiglieno nuclearconversiontheorymolecularhydrogeninnonmagneticinsulators
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