Insights into oxygen activation on metal clusters for catalyst design†
Abstract
The activation mechanism of O2 molecules plays a vital role in the development of catalysts for aerobic oxidation reactions. To gain insights into the activation mechanism of O2, square fragments of metal clusters are designed as the most promising active sites for the activation of O2 in aerobic oxidation reactions, where both the adsorption energy of O2 (Ead-O2) and the O–O bond energy (EO–O) in the adsorbed O2 are simultaneously small. A new descriptor Esum, combining Ead-O2 and EO–O, is proposed for evaluating the catalytic activity of aerobic oxidation reactions. The above insights are verified in the Ag38 cluster for CO oxidation by density functional theory calculations. The energy barrier for CO oxidation on the square Ag4 fragment is found to be 0.30 eV, which indicates that CO oxidation could occur at room (even lower) temperature.