Abstract

Kinetic Monte Carlo (kMC) simulations are a well-established tool for investigating the operation of electrochemical systems. Standard kMC algorithms become unfeasible in the presence of processes on vastly different time scales. In electrochemical systems, such time scale disparities often arise between fast transport processes and slow electrochemical reactions. A promising approach to overcome time scale disparities in kMC models is given by temporal acceleration schemes. In this work, we present a local temporal acceleration scheme to bridge the time scale disparity between fast transport and slow reaction dynamics. We combine the superbasin concept with a local, particle-based criterion for the quasi-equilibrium detection and a partitioning of transitions and particles in the system into process chains. Scaling of entire quasi-equilibrated process chains considerably reduces the computational effort without disturbing the relative dynamics of transitions within a process chain. The methodology is outlined for a hybrid organic-aqueous electrolyte device which links fast electronic processes in an organic semiconductor with slow reduction reactions at its interface to the electrolyte. Our approach captures local inhomogeneities such that local physical quantities can be reproduced accurately. Additionally, we show that previous accelerated superbasin algorithms are limited by the presence of spatially varying time scale disparities. Our algorithm achieves an acceleration of several orders of magnitude providing a serious alternative to replace existing multiscale models by stand-alone kMC simulations.

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