Abstract
Computer-based catalyst design has been a long standing dream of the chemistry community for replacing tedious and expensive experimental trial-and-error. While first-principle kinetic modeling emerges as a powerful tool for catalyst selection, it has mainly been limited to using a single catalyst descriptor, simplified chemical kinetic models, and assumptions that question the predictive capability of computational results in the absence of addressing the effect of error in kinetic parameters. Here, we introduce a new framework to address the effect of model uncertainty on optimal catalyst property identification. The framework is applied to the ammonia decomposition reaction for CO-free H 2 production for fuel cells. It is shown that a range of materials, rather than a single material, should be experimentally screened. Among kinetic model parameters, the often neglected adsorbate–adsorbate interactions can have a profound effect on catalyst selection. The importance of lateral interactions is confirmed with recent experimental data.
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