Abstract

Abstract Density functional theory (DFT) using the finite cluster approach is utilized to compute binding energies, bond geometries, and vibrational properties of carbon monoxide adsorbed on Pt(111) as a function of the external interfacial field, focusing attention on the metal–CO bond itself. Comparison with electrode potential-dependent frequencies for the metal–CO ( ν M–CO ) as well as the much-studied intramolecular CO ( ν CO ) vibration, as measured by in-situ Raman and infrared spectroscopy, facilitate their interpretation in terms of metal-chemisorbate bonding for this archetypal electrochemical system. Decomposing the calculated metal–CO binding energy and vibrational frequencies into individual orbital and steric repulsion components enables the role of such quantum-chemical interactions to the field- (and hence potential-) dependent bonding to be assessed. No simple relationship between the field( F )-dependent binding energies and the ν M–CO frequencies is evident. While the DFT ν M–CO – F slopes are negative at positive and small–moderate negative fields, reflecting the prevailing influence of back-donation, a ν M–CO – F maximum is obtained at larger negative fields for atop CO, and a plateau for hollow-site CO. This Stark-tuning behavior reflects largely offsetting field-dependent contributions from π and σ surface bonding, and can also be rationalized on the basis of changes in the electrostatic component of ν M–CO from increasing M–CO charge polarization. A rough correlation between the field-dependent ν M–CO frequencies and the corresponding bond distances, r M–CO , is observed for hollow and atop CO in that r M–CO shortens towards less positive fields, but becomes near-constant at moderate–large negative fields. A more quantitative correlation between the field-dependent CO frequencies and bond lengths is also evident. In harmony with earlier findings (and unlike the ν M–CO – F behavior), the ν CO – F dependence is due chiefly to changes in the back-donation bonding component. The overall vibrational frequency-field behavior predicted by DFT is also in semi-quantitative concordance with experimental potential-dependent spectra.

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