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Creators/Authors contains: "Mulvey, Devin"

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  1. We provide a summary of contemporary computational tools utilized in the study of adsorbate interactions with solid-state materials from the perspective of a quantum chemist. This work contains a focused theoretical primer of interactions between the molecular orbitals of an adsorbate and the electronic bands of a solid as well as a review of the promising methodologies for disentangling these contributions. We apply these tools in a methodological fashion to density functional theory (DFT) calculations of molecular hydrogen (H2), H2 adsorbed to the pristine Cu(111) surface, and H2 adsorbed to a single atom alloy comprised of palladium and copper (Pd/Cu(111)) to provide chemically intuitive explanations of bonding in these systems. 
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    Free, publicly-accessible full text available December 7, 2026
  2. Abstract A one-electron model Hamiltonian is used to characterize the non-valence correlation-bound (NVCB) anions of hexagonal polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs) C 6 n 2 H 6 n ( n = 3–7). The model incorporates atomic electrostatic moments up to the quadrupole, coupled inducible charges and dipoles, and atom-centered repulsive Gaussians to describe the interaction between the excess electron and PAH. These model components are parameterized on and validated against all-electron calculations. Good agreement is found between the static dipole polarizabilities obtained from the model and those from PBE0 density functional theory and second-order Møller–Plesset perturbation theory calculations. In the model, charge flow dominates the in-plane polarizability of PAHs larger than C 54 H 18 , yielding an approximately quadratic scaling of the mean polarizabilty with the number of carbon atoms. Inclusion of electrostatic interactions decreases the electron binding energies for the largest PAHs considered by about 20% and shift charge distribution from above and below the plane of the ring system toward the periphery. Analysis of the electrostatic and polarization interactions provides insight into qualitative trends in the electron binding energy and the charge distribution of the lowest energy NVCB anion. 
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