We derive a database of atomistic structural models of amorphous carbon materials endowed with exohedral functional groups. We start from phases previously derived using the DynReaxMas method for reactive molecular dynamics simulations, which exhibit atomistic and medium-length-scale features in excellent agreement with available experimental data. Given a generic input structure/phase, we develop postprocessing simulation algorithms mimicking experimental preparation protocols aimed at: (1) "curing" the phase to decrease the defect concentration; (2) automatically selecting the most reactive carbon atoms via interaction with a probe molecular species, and (3) stabilizing the phase by saturating the valence of carbon atoms with single-bond functional groups. Although we focus on oxygen-bearing functionalities, they can be replaced with other monovalent groups, such as -H, -COOH, -CHO, so that the protocol is quite general. We finally classify reactive sites in terms of their location within the structural framework and coordination environment (edges, tunnels, rings, aromatic carbons becoming aliphatic) and try to single out descriptors that correlate with tendency to functionalization.

Functionalized Amorphous Carbon Materials via Reactive Molecular Dynamics Simulations

Monti, Susanna;Barcaro, Giovanni;Fortunelli, Alessandro
2024

Abstract

We derive a database of atomistic structural models of amorphous carbon materials endowed with exohedral functional groups. We start from phases previously derived using the DynReaxMas method for reactive molecular dynamics simulations, which exhibit atomistic and medium-length-scale features in excellent agreement with available experimental data. Given a generic input structure/phase, we develop postprocessing simulation algorithms mimicking experimental preparation protocols aimed at: (1) "curing" the phase to decrease the defect concentration; (2) automatically selecting the most reactive carbon atoms via interaction with a probe molecular species, and (3) stabilizing the phase by saturating the valence of carbon atoms with single-bond functional groups. Although we focus on oxygen-bearing functionalities, they can be replaced with other monovalent groups, such as -H, -COOH, -CHO, so that the protocol is quite general. We finally classify reactive sites in terms of their location within the structural framework and coordination environment (edges, tunnels, rings, aromatic carbons becoming aliphatic) and try to single out descriptors that correlate with tendency to functionalization.
2024
Istituto di Chimica dei Composti Organo Metallici - ICCOM - Sede Secondaria Pisa
Istituto per i Processi Chimico-Fisici - IPCF - Sede Secondaria Pisa
anchoring sites
atomistic structural models
heteroatom doping
reactive modeling
ring statistics
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Descrizione: Descrizione: “This document is the Accepted Manuscript version of a Published Work that appeared in final form in ACS Applied Materials & Interfaces, copyright © 2024 American Chemical Society after peer review and technical editing by the publisher. To access the final edited and published work see https://doi.org/10.1021/acsami.4c06527.”
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.14243/495201
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