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Publication

Importance of Van der Waals Interactions in Hydrogen Adsorption on a Silicon-carbide Nanotube Revisited with vdW-DFT and Quantum Monte Carlo

Authors

Prayogo, Genki I; Shin, Hyeondeok; Benali, Anouar; Maezono, Ryo; Hongo, Kenta

Abstract

Density functional theory (DFT) is a valuable tool for calculating adsorption energies toward designing materials for hydrogen storage. However, dispersion forces being absent from the local/semi-local theory, it remains unclear as to how the consideration of van der Waals (vdW) interactions affects such calculations. For the first time, we applied diffusion Monte Carlo (DMC) to evaluate the adsorption characteristics of a hydrogen molecule on a (5,5) armchair silicon-carbide nanotube (H-2-SiCNT). Within the DFT framework, we benchmarked various exchange-correlation functionals, including those recently developed for treating dispersion or vdW interactions. We found that the vdW-corrected DFT methods agree well with DMC, whereas the local (semilocal) functional significantly over (under)-binds. Furthermore, we fully optimized the H-2-SiCNT geometry within the DFT framework and investigated the correlation between the structure and charge density. The vdW contribution to the adsorption was found to be non-negligible at similar to 1 kcal/mol per hydrogen molecule, which amounts to 9-29% of the ideal adsorption energy required for hydrogen storage applications.