Gerhard Ertl Lecture 2020: Oxide Surface Science. Chemistry at the Atomic Scale
- Date: Dec 10, 2020
- Time: 04:00 PM (Local Time Germany)
- Speaker: Prof. Dr. Ulrike Diebold
- Institute of Applied Physics, Vienna University of Technology, Austria.
- Location: Web-Stream
- Room: Otto Hahn Lecture Hall
- Host: Fritz Haber Institute

The surface science approach, pioneered by Gerhard Ertl and others, has
proven to be most powerful to understand surface chemical reactions at
the molecular scale. By applying tightly controlled conditions –
well-defined samples of increasing complexity, and the pristine
environment provided by ultrahigh vacuum – the interaction between
molecules and surface can be probed with exquisite detail. Such
experiments are an ideal counterpart for theoretical modelling. In the
past two decades, the interest has been expanded to an important yet
notoriously complex class of materials, metal oxides. Oxides are used as
inexpensive and robust support material in catalysis, where they are by
no means innocent bystanders, and play a major role in current and
emerging energy conversion schemes. In each case, reactions at their
surfaces are central, and insights into mechanistic processes are sought
after. The talk will describe recent advances and successes in the
surface science of metal oxides, including novel techniques to acquire
quantitative information of fundamental parameters at the atomic scale;
tactics to tackle structural complexity; and the push towards expanding
towards more ‘realistic’ environments without losing atomic-level
control.