Abstract

This article reports the results of a computational and experimental study on the reaction of hydrazoic acid, HN3, adsorbed on 15-20 nm TiO2 particle films. Experimentally, FTIR spectra of HN3(a) have been measured by varying HN3 dosage, UV irradiation time and surface annealing temperature. Three sharp peaks, related to v(a)(NNN) of HN3(a) and N3(a) with different configurations in the 2000-2200 cm(-1) region, and a broad band absorption, related to associated and isolated HN(a) and HO(a) adsorptions in the 3000-3800 cm(-1) region, have been detected. Computationally, molecular structures, vibrational frequencies and adsorption energies of possible adsorbates including HN3 and its derivatives, N3, N2, NH, and H, have been predicted by first-principles calculations based on the density functional theory (DFT) and the pseudopotential method. On the basis of the experimental and computational results, the peak appeared at 2075 cm(-1), which increases at a faster rate with HN3 exposure time, is attributed to a stable adsorbate, N3-Ti(a), with the predicted adsorption energy, E(ads) = 13 kcal/mol. The peak at 2118 cm(-1), which survives at the highest surface temperature in the heating experiment, is attributable to the most stable adsorbate, Ti-N2N(H)-O(a) with E(ads) = 36 kcal/mol. The peak at 2170 cm(-1), which vanishes most readily in all of the aforementioned experiments, is related to less stable molecular adsorbates, end-on HN3-Ti(a) with E(ads) = 5 kcal/mol and side-on HN(N2)-Ti(a) with E(ads) = 8 kcal/mol. A potential energy diagram for the formation of various absorbates with their transition states has been established for the HN3/TiO2 system. On the basis of the predicted desorption energies, the four most stable products of the HN3 reaction on TiO2 are H-O(a), 118 kcal/mol; HN-O(a), 85 kcal/mol; Ti-N2N(H)-O(a), 36 kcal/mol; and N3-O(a), 19 kcal/mol.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call