Surface Studies with Combined Free Energy Functionals of Electronic and Liquid Densities

ORAL

Abstract

The microscopic structure of both a solid surface and a contacting liquid can be dramatically affected by the interaction between the two systems, particularly at the interface between a polar surface and a polar liquid. We present a study of oxide and metallic surfaces in an aqueous electrolyte environment with Joint Density Functional Theory (JDFT), a computationally efficient alternative to molecular dynamics simulations which replaces thermal sampling with a single variational principle for the free energy of the full system. Within the rigorous framework of JDFT, we introduce classical density-functionals for ionic species and describe how to couple them with existing functionals for liquid water and traditional electronic density-functionals. Calculations employ a liquid water functional, which captures bulk properties and microscopic structure over the entire phase diagram of the liquid, and a density-only coupling functional between the electronic and liquid systems, which can reproduce solvation free energies of small molecules to within chemical accuracy. With this microscopically accurate description of the liquid-solid interface structure, we gain physical insight which could direct future studies of catalysis and electrode stability in electrochemical systems.

*This material is based upon work supported by the Energy Materials Center at Cornell (EMC2), an Energy Frontier Research Center funded by the U.S. Department of Energy, Office of Science, Office of Basic Energy Sciences under Award Number DE-SC0001086

Authors

  • Kendra Letchworth Weaver

    • Physics Department, Cornell University
    • Department of Physics, Cornell University
  • Ravishankar Sundararaman

    • Physics Department, Cornell University
    • Department of Physics, Cornell University
  • Tom\'as Arias

    • Cornell University, Department of Physics
    • Department of Physics, Cornell University