Transition and noble metal clusters have proven to be critical novel materials, potentially offering major advantages over conventional catalysts in a range of value-added catalytic processess such as carbon dioxide transformation to methanol. In this work, a systematic computational study of CO2 adsorption on gas-phase Cu4-xPtx (x = 0-4) clusters is performed. An exhaustive potential energy surface exploration is initially performed using our recent density functional theory basin-hopping global optimization implementation. Ground-state and low-lying energy isomers are identified for Cu4-xPtx clusters. Secondly, a CO2 molecule adsorption process is analyzed on the ground-state Cu4-xPtx configurations, as a function of cluster composition. Our results show that the gas-phase linear CO2 molecule is deformed upon adsorption, with its bend angle varying from about 132° to 139°. Cu4-xPtx cluster geometries remain unchanged after CO2 adsorption, with the exception of Cu3Pt1 and Pt4 clusters. For these particular cases, a structural conversion between the ground-state geometry and the corresponding first isomer configurations is found to be assisted by the CO2 adsorption. For all clusters, the energy barriers between the ground-state and first isomer structures are explored. Our calculated CO2 adsorption energies are found to be larger for Pt-rich clusters, exhibiting a volcano-type plot. The overall effect of a hybrid functional including dispersion forces is also discussed.
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