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1.
The adsorption and desorption of glycine (NH2CH2COOH), vacuum deposited on a NiAl(1 1 0) surface, were investigated by means of Auger electron spectroscopy (AES), low energy electron diffraction (LEED), temperature-programmed desorption, work function (Δφ) measurements, and ultraviolet photoelectron spectroscopy (UPS). At 120 K, glycine adsorbs molecularly forming mono- and multilayers predominantly in the zwitterionic state, as evidenced by the UPS results. In contrast, the adsorption at room temperature (310 K) is mainly dissociative in the early stages of exposure, while molecular adsorption occurs only near saturation coverage. There is evidence that this molecularly adsorbed species is in the anionic form (NH2CH2COO). Analysis of AES data reveals that upon adsorption glycine attacks the aluminium sites on the surface. On heating part of the monolayer adsorbed at 120 K is converted to the anionic form and at higher temperatures dissociates further before desorption. The temperature-induced dissociation of glycine (<400 K) leads to a series of similar reaction products irrespective of the initial adsorption step at 120 K or at 310 K, leaving finally oxygen, carbon and nitrogen at the surface. AES and LEED measurements indicate that oxygen interacts strongly with the Al component of the surface forming an “oxide”-like Al-O layer.  相似文献   

2.
We have investigated the decomposition of carbon monoxide on polycrystalline and (001), (110) monocrystalline molybdenum surfaces. This study was performed by massspectrometry, for thermal desorption studies, Auger electron spectrometry (AES), low energy electron diffraction (LEED) and photoelectron spectroscopy (ESCA). By heating the clean Mo surface in CO or by heating the Mo surface covered with CO, the dissociation of chemisorbed CO leads to a build-up of carbon layer which inhibits the subsequent adsorption. Two distinct types of fine structure are associated with the KLL line of carbon Auger spectra. If the Mo surface is heated at a temperature between 300 and 1500 K, the Auger peak is characteristic of a “graphite layer”. If the Mo surface is heated at a temperature up to 2000 K, the Auger peak is characteristic of a “carbure” layer. This “carbure layer” give rise to a surstructure which agrees with a Mo2C surface layer and was also investigated by ESCA. Chemical shifts of (1s) C and (3d) Mo photoemission bands were observed and attributed to the bounding between Mo and C atoms in the Mo2C layer.  相似文献   

3.
4.
The structure, and reactivity towards O2 and CO, of the (111) crystal face of a single crystal of high purity thorium metal was studied using low-energy electron diffraction (LEED) and Auger electron spectroscopy (AES). After the sample was cleaned in vacuum by a combination of ion bombardment and annealing, a (1 × 1) LEED pattern characteristic of a (111) surface was obtained. Extended annealing of the cleaned sample at 1000 K produced a new LEED pattern characteristic of a (9 × 9) surface structure. A model of a reconstructed thorium surface is presented that generates the observed LEED pattern. When monolayer amounts of either O2 or CO were adsorbed onto the crystal surface at 300 K, no ordered surface structures formed. Upon heating the sample following these exposures the (111) surface structure was restored accompanied by a reduction in the amount of surface carbon and oxygen. With continued exposure to either O2 or CO and annealing, a new LEED pattern developed which was interpreted as resulting from the formation of thorium dioxide. Debye-Walter factor measurements were made by monitoring the intensity of a specularly reflected electron beam and indicated that the Debye temperature of the surface region is less than it is in bulk thorium. Consequently, the mean displacement of thorium atoms from their equilibrium positions was found to increase at the surface of the crystal. The presence of chemisorbed oxygen on the crystal surface affected the Debye temperature, raising it significantly.  相似文献   

5.
The adsorption of oxygen on W(100) single crystal surfaces is studied by Auger electron spectroscopy (AES), flash desorption, low-energy electron diffraction (LEED) and retarding field work function measurements with the aim of obtaining a better understanding of the adsorption kinetics and of the structures of the adsorbed layer. The AES results reveal step-wise changes of the sticking coefficients in the coverage range 0 to 1, and activated adsorption at higher coverages. Upon room temperature adsorption a series of complex LEED patterns is observed. In layers adsorbed at 1050 K and cooled to room temperature, the well-known p(2 × 1) structure is the first ordered structure observed. This structure shows a reversible order-disorder transition between 700 K and 1000 K and is characterized by a work function which is lower than that of the clean surface. Heating room temperature adsorbates changes their structure irreversibly. At temperatures below 750 K some new structures are observed. Combining the results obtained in this study with other published work leads to a considerable revision of the previously accepted model of the adsorption of oxygen on W(100).  相似文献   

6.
The adsorption of Xe and CO on Ag(111) in the range 66 to 123 K and 10?7 to 10?1 Pa has been studied by surface potential, low energy electron diffraction (LEED), Auger electron spectroscopy (AES) and electron energy loss spectroscopic (EELS) measurements. Isotherms derived from both surface potential and AES measurements for submonolayer Xe adsorption reveal successive stages and a two-dimensional phase change. Isosteric heats were 18 ± 1 kJ mol?1. Temkin isotherms were observed for CO, the heat falling linearly with coverage from an initial value of 27 ± 1.5 kj mol?1. No ordered CO overlayer structure could be detected. EEL spectra of clean Ag(111) agree with previous studies. Additional loss peaks were recorded for Xe and CO overlayers, and the assignment of the substrate loss features is discussed in relation to the effects of adsorption.  相似文献   

7.
Auger electron spectroscopy (AES), low energy electron diffraction (LEED) and work function (Kelvin probe) measurements have been used to study the initial interaction of clean Al(111), (100) and (110) surfaces with oxygen at room temperature. The oxidation process was found to be surface orientation dependent, but a common feature has been always observed on the three low-index surfaces: they show two distinct phases, i.e. a chemisorbed phase followed then by an oxidized phase. From analysis of AES, LEED and Kelvin probe results, an adsorption mechanism of O on Al for each surface orientation is proposed.  相似文献   

8.
E.I. Ko  R.J. Madix 《Surface science》1981,109(1):221-238
The deposit of carbon and oxygen adatoms on Mo(100) was characterized by AES and LEED. Carbon was introduced by the thermal cracking of ethylene; several ordered structures were observed as a function of coverage with carbon atoms residing on four-fold sites. The Mo(100)—O system exhibited two different sequences of LEED patterns depending on the adsorption temperature of oxygen. The effects of adsorbed carbon and oxygen on the chemisorption properties of Mo(100) was investigated by FDS. The presence of either carbon or oxygen severely hindered the ability of Mo(100) to dissociatively adsorb hydrogen or carbon monoxide. The amount of CO dissociated was directly related to the available four-fold sites on the carbide surfaces. The molecular adsorption of CO was not significantly affected by the adlayers. It was found that one monolayer of adsorbed oxygen reduced the binding energy of molecular CO considerably more than the same amount of adsorbed carbon. A continuous shift in the binding energy of CO with the C/O ratio on the surface was observed.  相似文献   

9.
The adsorption and desorption of oxygen, carbon monoxide, deuterium and ethylene has been studied over rhenium films using thermal desorption spectroscopy, low energy electron diffraction and Auger electron spectroscopy. The films, obtained by evaporating rhenium onto a platinum (111) single crystal, grow over the substrate forming (0001) basal plane rhenium surfaces. Oxygen chemisorbs on this film, forming an ordered structure, consisting of three (2 × 1) overlayer domains and giving a saturation coverage of half a monolayer of atomic oxygen. CO chemisorption is mainly molecular, although some dissociation occurs at temperatures above about 700 K. A complicated LEED pattern is obtained when saturating the surface at 150 K with CO, but it changes to a (2 × 2) or (2 × 1) structure upon heating. Also, CO chemisorption can be modified by predissociated CO or preadsorbed oxygen on the rhenium surface. Deuterium desorbs in three peaks, starting at temperatures as low as 150 K. Ethylene desorbs partially intact at around 250 K, the rest decomposing and yielding hydrogen, that appears as two main peaks at 357 K and 460 K during thermal desorption. We conclude that epitaxially grown films may be an alternative to single crystals for studying chemisorption over well ordered surfaces.  相似文献   

10.
The adsorption of D2O on Zr(0001) at 80 K and its subsequent reactions at higher temperatures have been studied by thermal desorption spectroscopy (TDS), work-function measurements (Δф), nuclear reaction analysis (NRA), LEED, infrared reflection spectroscopy (FTIR-RAS), Auger electron spectroscopy (AES), and static secondary ion mass spectroscopy (SSIMS). D2O adsorption on Zr(0001) at 80 K is accompanied by a Δф of −1.33 eV. The adsorbed D2O can be characterized into three layers by TDS: a chemisorbed layer (up to 0.23 ML), a second adsorbed layer, and an ice layer. The chemisorbed D2O dissociates into ODad and Dad at 80 K (possibly also into Oad) and no desorption products could be detected, implying that the reaction products dissolved into the zirconium at temperatures appropriate for each component. The ice layer and most of the second adsorbed layer desorb as molecular water during heating. The water adsorbed at 80 K did not form any long-range ordered structure, but a (2 × 2) LEED pattern that was formed by heating the sample to temperatures above 430 K is believed due to be an ordered oxygen superstructure.  相似文献   

11.
The adsorption of potassium on Fe(100) was studied by time-of-flight forward scattering and recoiling spectroscopy (TOF-SARS), low energy electron diffraction (LEED) and Auger electron spectroscopy (AES). After heating to 650 K of the potassium saturated surface the formation of a p(3 × 3) potassium superstructure was observed by LEED. TOF-SARS experiments ruled out the adsorption of potassium in the on-top, bridge and four-fold hollow site. The only site which is in agreement with all experimental results is the substitutional site where K replaces an Fe atom of the topmost layer of the crystal. This is the first time a substitutional adsorption site has been found on a bcc surface. On an fcc surface such an adsorption site has been found recently for adsorption of sodium and potassium on Al(111).  相似文献   

12.
Electron beam assisted adsorption and desorption of oxygen was studied by Auger electron spectroscopy (AES). Beam assisted adsorption was observed on clean as well as on oxidized surfaces. After an oxygen exposure of 1000 × 10?7 Torr min and continuous irradiation with beam voltage of 1.5 kV and beam current density 2 microA mm?2, the oxygen 510 eV signal amplitude from the point of beam impact was 2.5 times greater than the signal from the non-irradiated region. The Ge 89 eV signal showed a corresponding decrease. Enhanced adsorption occurred at beam energies as low as 16.5 eV. After irradiation, the oxidized surface was not carbon contaminated. Following an oxygen exposure of 30 min at 0.1 Torr and 550°C and subsequent additional beam assisted exposure of 1000 × 10?7 Torr min, the maximum oxide thickness was about 18 Å. Beam assisted desorption did not occur from thin oxygen layers (0–510 eV signal strength less than 5 units, calculated oxide thickness about 6 Å), but occurred from thick oxides and stopped after the signal amplitude had decreased to 5 units. Based on these results, a model for the structure of the oxygen layer covering the Ge(111) surface is proposed. Mechanisms for adsorption and desorption are discussed. The implications of beam assisted adsorption and desorption on electron beam operated surface measurements (LEED, AES, ELS, APS etc.) are stressed.  相似文献   

13.
The adsorption of oxygen on the carbon-covered W(001) surface was studied by AES and low energy ion scattering. At low carbon and oxygen coverages, both species can be accommodated on the surface. At higher coverages, the oxygen displaces the carbon into the near-surface (selvedge) region. When oxygen is adsorbed on the W(001)-p(5 × 1)C surface (formed by exposure to more than 50 L of ethylene at 1500 K), carbon is displaced in a nearly one for one manner. Annealing the oxygen-covered p(5 × 1)C surface to 950 K removes up to 0.5 ML oxygen as CO. Interestingly, the surface carbon coverage is unchanged by CO desorption at 950 K and subsurface carbon is partially replenished by diffusion from the bulk. Oxygen adsorption in excess of 0.5 ML suppresses carbon segregation from the bulk at 950 K. The additional oxygen does not desorb until 1300 K. Surface carbon is restored by annealing to 1500 K.. The degree and rate of carbon segregation depend on the initial ethylene exposure even though the resulting W(001)-p(5 × 1)C surfaces are identical according to AES, LEED, and ion scattering.  相似文献   

14.
The adsorption of CO on Cu(111) has been studied by Auger electron spectroscopy (AES), low energy electron diffraction (LEED), electron energy loss spectroscopy (EELS), work function measurements and thermal desorption spectroscopy. Two LEED overlayers of CO on Cu(111) have been found: √3 × √3R30° and 73× √73R49.1°. Two different heats of adsorption were derived from thermal desorption spectra: 44.2 and 35.1 kj/mole. The isosteric heat of adsorption evaluated from work function measurements corresponds to the thermal desorption results. Energy losses due to CO adsorption have been found by means of EELS at 4.7, 7.7, and 13.8 eV.  相似文献   

15.
The interactions which occur between electron beams in the energy range 0.5–2.5 keV, with currents of 0.1–1.0 microA and various adsorbates (H2, CO, CH4 and C2H4) on silicon surfaces have been investigated. The accumulation of beam induced dissociation products on the surface has been monitored by Auger spectroscopy, and the extent of electron stimulated desorption of neutral molecules has been determined mass spectroscopically. Thermal desorption spectra for various gases have also been obtained in order to compare adsorption behaviour with and without the presence of an electron beam. It is concluded that serious experimental errors may occur when LEED and AES are used in adsorption studies, particularly where comparatively weak binding energies are involved.  相似文献   

16.
LEED and Auger spectroscopy have been used to obtain the superficial carbon density on a carburized Mo(100) surface. Using this calibration procedure, comparison is made between the carburization and the adsorption of CO. The results are consistent with the dissociation of the (β-CO phases; using this assumption the adsorption kinetics of CO on Mo(100) is reinterpreted.  相似文献   

17.
H. Niehus 《Surface science》1979,87(2):561-580
Oxygen and carbon monoxide adsorption on clean W(111) surfaces have been studied by angular resolved ESD emission (ESDIAD). In addition, the specimen could be characterized in situ with AES and LEED. Adsorption was performed at room temperature. The electron stimulated desorption yielded O+ ions from the two investigated adsorption layers. Upon oxygen adsorption followed by subsequent annealing at least eight different ESDIAD patterns have been obtained. However, a convincing interpretation on the basis of the surface geometry can only be presented for three patterns produced without annealing as well as for one pattern at a very high annealing temperature. The difficulties are a consequence of complex structure changes which the surface undergoes in the intermediate annealing temperature range. This may influence the little known neutralisation probability of the desorbing ions. In this special case ESDIAD probably reflects in contrast to LEED a picture of some specific adsorption sites (minority species) and therefore, no clear correlation of the two techniques can be seen. ESDIAD from carbon monoxide shows four different patterns and supports the model of linear bonded CO molecules at room temperature with oxygen in the “standing up” position. At T > 900 K, CO starts to dissociate and results in similar ESDIAD patterns as obtained from O2 adsorption.  相似文献   

18.
The adsorption of oxygen on a (110)Ag surface is investigated by means of Auger electron spectroscopy, LEED and low energy helium ion scattering (IS). With LEED two ordered structures, i.e. (3×1) and (2×1) were observed at oxygen exposures of 1700 L and 7000 L respectively. The oxygen signal observed by AES and IS increases monotonically with oxygen exposure. The signals can be related to absolute coverage by comparison with Δφ measurements and by the use of the LEED data. With this calibration and with theoretical scattering cross-sections the IS measurements allow the position of the adsorbed oxygen to be estimated. The observation of a strong azimuthal anisotropy of the IS signal, e.g. a large oxygen signal if the plane of scattering is parallel to the [110] direction and a relatively small oxygen signal in the [100] direction, leads to the conclusion that the oxygen is adsorbed in a bridge position between two Ag atoms of the [110] surface channels, its centre being slightly below the centres of the Ag atoms.  相似文献   

19.
The adsorption of Xe and CO on Au(100) has been studied by LEED, Auger electron spectroscopy, electron energy loss spectroscopy (EELS) and surface potential measurements. The physical adsorption of xenon showed successive stages preceding the completion of a monolayer. The heat of adsorption was 22 (±2) kJ mol?1 and the maximum surface potential was 0.45 V. Carbon monoxide gave a surface potential of 0.85 V at the highest coverage reached. The heat of adsorption showed a continuous fall from an initial value of 58 (±3) kJ mol?1 as the coverage increased. Ordered adsorption structures were not observed in LEED for either Xe or CO. The EEL spectrum of clean Au(100) agreed well with spectra of polycrystalline gold. New loss features observed with adsorbed Xe and CO are discussed.  相似文献   

20.
Adlayers of oxygen, carbon, and sulfur on W(211) have been characterized by LEED, AES, TPD, and CO adsorption. Oxygen initially adsorbs on the W(211) surface forming p(2 × 1)O and p(1 × 1)O structures. Atomic oxygen is the only desorption product from these surfaces. This initial adsorption selectively inhibits CO dissociation in the CO(β1) state. Increased oxidation leads to a p(1 × 1)O structure which totally inhibits CO dissociation. Volatile metal oxides desorb from the p(1 × 1)O surface at 1850 K. Oxidation of W(211) at 1200 K leads to reconstruction of the surface and formation of p(1 × n)O LEED patterns, 3 ? n ? 7. The reconstructed surface also inhibits CO dissociation and volatile metal oxides are observed to desorb at 1700 K, as well as at 1850 K. Carburization of the W(211) surface below 1000 K produced no ordered structures. Above 1000 K carburization produces a c(6 × 4)C which is suggested to result from a hexagonal tungsten carbide overlayer. CO dissociation is inhibited on the W(211)?c(6×4)C surface. Sulfur initially orders into a c(2 × 2)S structure on W(211). Increased coverage leads to a c(2×6)S structure and then a complex structure. Adsorbed sulfur reduces CO dissociation on W(211), but even at the highest sulfur coverages CO dissociation was observed. Sulfur was found to desorb as atomic S at 1850 K for sulfur coverages less than 76 monolayers. At higher sulfur coverages the dimer, S2, was observed to desorb at 1700 K in addition to atomic sulfur desorption.  相似文献   

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