posted on 2021-06-30, 15:39authored byAlexandra Göbel, Angel Rubio, Johannes Lischner
Charge
transfer between molecules and catalysts plays a critical
role in determining the efficiency and yield of photochemical catalytic
processes. In this paper, we study light-induced electron transfer
between transition-metal-doped aluminum clusters and CO2 molecules using first-principles time-dependent density-functional
theory. Specifically, we carry out calculations for a range of dopants
(Zr, Mn, Fe, Ru, Co, Ni, and Cu) and find that the resulting systems
fall into two categories: Cu- and Fe-doped clusters exhibit no ground-state
charge transfer, weak CO2 adsorption, and light-induced
electron transfer into the CO2. In all other systems, we
observe ground-state electron transfer into the CO2 resulting
in strong adsorption and predominantly light-induced electron back-transfer
from the CO2 into the cluster. These findings pave the
way toward a rational design of atomically precise aluminum photocatalysts.