The molecular and dissociative adsorption of methane-thiol (CH(3)SH) in the high-coverage limit on the (111) surfaces of the Ni-group metals has been investigated using ab initio density functional techniques. In molecular form, methane-thiol is bound to the surface only by weak polarization-induced forces in a slightly asymmetric configuration with the C-S axis tilted by 35-60° relative to the surface normal. On Ni and Pd surfaces the S atom occupies a position close to a bridge site; on Pt it is located close to an on-top position. The length of the S-H bond is only slightly stretched relative to its value in the gas phase, indicating only a very modest degree of activation for dehydrogenation. A strong covalent adsorbate/substrate bond is formed upon adsorption of a methane-thiolate (CH(3)S) radical. On Ni(111) in the energetically most favorable configuration the S atom occupies a position in a threefold hollow, slightly displaced towards a bridge site. The C-S axis is tilted by about 35° across the bridge. On Pd(111) and Pt(111) the S atom of thiolate occupies a position between a hollow and a bridge site, with the C-S axis tilted even more strongly across a neighboring threefold hollow. On all three surfaces our calculations demonstrate the existence of multiple metastable adsorption configurations, including upright CH(3)S bound in the center of a threefold hollow as reported in some earlier studies. Dehydrogenation of the adsorbed methane-thiol to form co-adsorbed methane-thiolate and atomic hydrogen is an exothermic process, which is not activated on Ni(111) but activated on Pd(111) and Pt(111).
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