Description |
Nankai University Department of Chemistry, Tianjin, China
Abstract:
Specifically, the case studies I will present are: an inorganic reaction (ammonia cracking) on a graphitic carbon nitride supported metal site, an organic production reaction of γ-Valerolactone (GVL) on a metal nanoparticle[2], and catalytic reduction of an organic pollutant on lanthanide oxides. A problem common to all of these reac- tions is computational cost, but each also has inherent difficulties that I will explain. I will finish by summarizing the directions I am taking in my group to make DFT studies of catalysis more predictive and computationally efficient. This will include improvements to linear-scaling DFT algorithms[3] for metals[1] and parameterization of cheaper methods from DFT. [1] J. Aarons and C.-K. Skylaris. Electronic annealing fermi operator expansion for dft calculations on metallic systems. The Journal of chemical physics, 148(7):074107, 2018. [2] F. Lan, J. Aarons, Y. Shu, X. Zhou, H. Jiao, H. Wang, Q. Guan, and W. Li. Anchoring strategy for highly active copper nanoclusters in hydrogenation of renewable biomass-derived compounds. Applied Catalysis B: Environmental, 299:120651, 2021.
[3] J. C. Prentice, J. Aarons, J. C. Womack, A. E. Allen, L. Andrinopoulos, L. Anton, R. A. Bell, A. Bhandari, G. A. Bramley, R. J. Charlton, et al. The onetep linear-scaling density functional theory program. The Journal of chemical physics, 152(17):174111, 2020.
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