2021 Annual Meeting
(639b) How to Write the Rate of a* + a*
An accurate kinetic description requires improvement upon the mean-field (i.e. Hinshelwood) assumption. We demonstrate the utility of a formalism which explicitly describes dynamics of multi-site ensembles by inclusion of higher-order rate terms specific to each ensemble and each elementary step in context of the reaction A* + A*.
We illustrate in context of this example, adsorbate clustering and isolation is caused by disparate elementary step rates and site-size requirements engendering (i) aggregation (μij >> 1) of slowly-consumed ensembles and (ii) partitioning (μij << 1) of rapidly-consumed (i.e. highly-reactive) ensembles â resulting in a âpoorly-mixedâ or âtransport-limitedâ surface. Adsorbate surface diffusion resolves rate-controlling âtransport limitationsâ by dispersing clustered species and allying highly-reactive, isolated species. Only, in the limit of infinitely-fast surface diffusion (i.e. a reaction-limited, rather than transport-limited surface), does adsorbate distribution randomize and the Hinshelwood approximation become valid.