The elementary steps of the methanol synthesis reaction at oxygen vacancies on the polar ZnO(0001 j ) surface have been studied with density functional theory. We report results for reaction and activation energies for the most important elementary steps of the methanol synthesis reaction on this surface. At these oxygen vacancies the barriers for heterolytic cleavage of H 2 into protons, bound in surface OH groups, and hydrides, trapped in the vacancies, is low. The stabilized hydride facilitates the reduction of CO to formyl (stabilized in the vacancy) with a low barrier j100 kJ/mol. After a fast rearrangement to formaldehyde and hydroxymethylene species, a second reduction step leads probably to a surface-bound methoxide which at reducing conditions desorbs from the surface under regeneration of an oxygen vacancy. Beside formate, which appears as a side product, and formyl species, oxygen-bound hydroxymethylene might be another observable intermediate of the methanol synthesis reaction at oxygen vacancy sites on the ZnO(0001 j ) surface.
We used ab initio density functional theory in combination with an embedded cluster approach to calculate vibrational spectra and formation enthalpies of possible intermediates and side products (spectator species) in the synthesis of methanol out of syngas on the ZnO(0001) surface. Our investigations are based upon our previous work on possible reaction pathways and activation barriers for this reaction at oxygen vacancies on ZnO(0001). We present and discuss calculated vibrational frequencies of short-living formyl, hydroxymethylene, formaldehyde, acetale, and hydroxymethyl intermediates and compare the calculated frequencies of formate and methoxy species as well as CO and CO(2) species, at the defect free surface and at oxygen vacancies, with recent experimental findings. All investigated species show characteristic features in their spectra. Therefore, the analysis of their vibrational frequencies is a suitable mean to distinguish them and gain new insights in this reaction which is of recent experimental interest. We are able to identify the structure and characteristics of different surface species, such as monodentate and polydentate carbonate and formate species, in agreement with experimental results.
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