First-Principles Assessment of H[subscript 2]S and H[subscript 2]O Reaction Mechanisms and the Subsequent Hydrogen Absorption on the CeO[subscript 2](111) Surface

The main goal of this study is to assess the resistance of ceria against hydrogen penetration into its bulk, in the context of its application as a protective surface coating against hydrogen embrittlement in metals. We evaluate the reaction mechanisms between the H[subscript 2]S and H[subscript 2]O...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Marrocchelli, Dario, Yildiz, Bilge
Other Authors: Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Department of Nuclear Science and Engineering
Format: Article
Language:en_US
Published: American Chemical Society (ACS) 2014
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/86397
https://orcid.org/0000-0002-2688-5666
Description
Summary:The main goal of this study is to assess the resistance of ceria against hydrogen penetration into its bulk, in the context of its application as a protective surface coating against hydrogen embrittlement in metals. We evaluate the reaction mechanisms between the H[subscript 2]S and H[subscript 2]O molecules and the CeO[subscript 2](111) surface and their kinetic descriptors, using first principles based calculations in the density functional theory framework. Our approach is validated by performing an extensive comparison with the available experimental data. We predict that hydrogen penetration into CeO[subscript 2](111) is a surface-absorption-limited process with a high-energy barrier (1.67 eV) and endothermicity (1.50 eV), followed by a significantly lower bulk dissolution energy and diffusion barrier (0.67 and 0.52 eV, respectively). We find that the presence of surface vacancies and higher coverages affects significantly the energetics of H[subscript 2]S/H[subscript 2]O adsorption, dissociation, and hydrogen subsurface absorption, facilitating most of these processes and degrading the protectiveness of ceria against hydrogen penetration. The reasons behind these effects are discussed. Overall we expect ceria to hinder the hydrogen incorporation significantly due to the effectively large energy barrier against subsurface absorption, provided vacancy formation is suppressed.