Abstract

Ethanol electrooxidation on the Pt(111) electrode has been studied with computational theory. Using a solvation model and a modified Poison-Boltzmann theory for electrolyte polarization, standard reversible potentials for forming 17 reaction intermediates in solution were calculated with density functional theory. Reversible potentials for adsorbed intermediates were then determined by inputting calculated adsorption energies into a linear Gibbs energy relationship. A path to CO2 was found where surface potentials were low and close to the calculated 0.004 V reversible potential for the 12 electron oxidation of ethanol. An exception was the 0.49 V potential for forming the OH(ads) from H2O(l), this being required for oxidation of CO(ads) and RH(ads) intermediates. The surface potentials show that acetyl, OCCH3(ads) forms at small positive potentials and decomposes to CH(ads), CH3(ads), and CO(ads), which poison the surface at these potentials. Energy losses due to non-electron transfer reaction steps are small and cause a small shift in the reversible potential for the 12 electron oxidation. Values for adsorption bond strengths over a perfect catalyst were determined. It is concluded that on an ideal catalyst most intermediates will adsorb more weakly and OH more strongly than on Pt(111).

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