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1.
The chemisorption of CO on W(100) at ~ 100K has been studied using a combination of flash desorption and electron stimulated desorption (ESD) techniques. This is an extension of a similar study made for CO adsorption on W(100) at temperatures in the range 200–300K. As in the 200–300 K CO layer, both α1-CO and α2-CO are formed in addition to more strongly bound CO species upon adsorption at ~ 100K; the α-CO states yield CO+ and O+ respectively upon ESD. At low CO coverages, the α1 and α2-CO states are postulated to convert to β-CO or other strongly bound CO species upon heating. At higher CO coverages, α1-CO converts to α2-CO upon thermal desorption or electron stimulated desorption. There is evidence for the presence of other weakly-bound states in the low temperature CO layer having low surface concentration at saturation. The ESD behavior of the CO layer coadsorbed with hydrogen on W(100) is reported, and it is found that H(ads) suppresses either the concentration or the ionic cross section for α1 and α2-CO states.  相似文献   

2.
CO/W desorption spectra are characterized by an α state and multiple β states; using electron stimulated desorption (ESD) the α state was shown to comprise two sub-states, α1 and α2. In this paper the consecutive interactions of O2 and CO on W are investigated using ESD, flash desorption and field emission microscopy (FEM).Desorption spectra show that the α-CO state is displaced by O2, in two stages. The ESD probe provides an identification of the first stage with the removal of the α1-CO state, and energy analysis of ESD ions reveals a large energy shift (~ ? 1.5 eV) during O2 coadsorption which can be attributed to an incresae in the α1-CO WC bond length of ~ 0.15 Å. During this O2-induced displacement, the two β peaks converge into a single peak at the β1 position; this is ascribed to adatom interactions in the mixed O and C adlayer. Isotope exchange experiments with 28CO and 36O2 reveal (i) no exchange in the α-CO states, and (ii) complete exchange in the β-CO states, which is consistent with dissociative adsorption in the latter. The amount of coadsorbed O2 is estimated from these results, and from FEM data: a full monolayer of O adatoms can be coadsorbed on CO-saturated W, but CO pre-adsorption inhibits the formation of W oxides. The β1-O2 (ESD active) state also forms on the CO-covered surface: this state is identical in population, ESD cross section and ion energy distribution to β1-O2 on clean W, and retains its identity in the mixed layer (it does not undergo isotopic exchange). CO2 desorption spectra from the mixed layer were also characterised, complete isotopic scrambling being observed.Pre-exposure of tungsten to O2 inhibits CO adsorption: a monolayer of O2 is sufficient to prevent CO adsorption, and at low O2 coverages, every O2 molecule preadsorbed prevents one CO molecule from adsorbing. Isotopic exchange is again complete in the β states, and a lateral interaction model for desorption kinetics, based on dissociative adsorption in the β-CO state, quantitatively describes the CO desorption spectra.  相似文献   

3.
Photoelectron spectra (hv = 21.22 eV) and thermal desorption data were obtained for CO and H coadsorbed on W(100) at 80 K. When the clean surface is exposed to a saturation dose of H2, subsequent exposure to CO results in the formation of a state whose emission spectrum is similar to that of molecular α-CO. Upon heating to ~280 K, a structural rearrangement occurs in which most of the adsorbed CO is converted to the strongly bound β form as the hydrogen is simultaneously desorbed. These data plus the observation that H2 cannot be adsorbed to any significant degree on a saturated layer of β-CO suggest that adsorbed β-CO and H occupy the same atomic sites on the W(100) surface. The distinction between long and short range repulsive COH interactions is discussed. For CO adsorbed on clean W(100), the range of activation energies for vigin to β conversion is calculated from the UPS data to be 45–62 kJ/mol.  相似文献   

4.
The chemisorption of both CO and O2 on a clean tungsten ribbon has been studied using an ultrahigh vacuum X-ray photoelectron spectrometer. For CO, the energy and intensity of photoemission from O(1s) and C(1s) core levels have been studied for various adsorption temperatures.At adsorption temperatures of ~100 K., the “virgin”-CO state was the dominant adsorbed species. Conversion of this state to more strongly-bound β-CO is observed upon heating the adsorbed layer to ~320K. Thermal desorption of CO at 300?T?640 K causes sequential loss of α1-CO and α2-CO as judged by the disappearance of O(1s) and C(1s) photoelectron peaks characteristic of these states.Oxygen adsorption at 300K gives a single main O(ls) peak at all coverages, although at high oxygen coverages there exist small auxiliary peaks at ~2eV lower kinetic energy. The photoelectron C(1s) and O(1s) binding energies observed for these adsorbed species are all lower than for gaseous molecules containing C and O atoms. For CO adsorption states there is a systematic decrease in photoelectron binding energy as the strength of adsorption increases. These observations are in general accord with expectations based on electronic relaxation effects in condensed materials.  相似文献   

5.
The electron impact behavior of CO adsorbed on was investigated. The desorption products observed were neutral CO, CO+, and O+. After massive electron impact residual carbon, C/W = 0.15, but not oxygen was also found, suggesting that energetic neutral O, not detected in a mass analyzer must also have been formed. Formation of β-CO, i.e., dissociated CO with C and O on the surface was not seen. The total disappearance cross section varies only slightly with coverage, ranging from 9 × 10 −18 cm2 at low to 5 × 10−18 cm2 at saturation (CO/W = 0.75). The cross section for CO+ formation varies from 4 × 10−22 cm2 at satura to 2 × 10−21 cm2 at low coverage. That for O+ formation is 1.4 × 10−22 cm2 at saturation and 2 × 10−21 cm2 Threshold energies are similar to those found previously [J.C. Lin and R. Gomer, Surf. Sci. 218 (1989) 406] for and CO/Cu1/W(110) which suggests similar mechanisms for product formation, with the exception of β-CO on clean W(110). It is argued that the absence or presence of β-CO in ESD hinges on its formation or absence in thermal desorption, since electron impact is likely to present the surface with vibrationally and rotationally activated CO in all cases; β-CO formation only occurs on surfaces which can dissociate such CO. It was also found that ESD of CO led to a work function increase of the remaining Pd1/W(110) surface of 500 meV, which could be annealed out only at 900 K. This is attributed to surface roughness, caused by recoil momentum of energetic desorbing entities.  相似文献   

6.
鲍世宁  朱立  徐亚伯 《物理学报》1991,40(11):1888-1892
在不同K覆盖度的W(100)面上吸附CO的Hel紫外光电子能谱研究表明:α和β态的CO由于K的影响,吸附状态发生改变,与CO分子态(α态)有关的5σ/1π分子轨道能级随K覆盖度的增加,结合能位置从8.6eV移到9.3eV,反映K出现后,衬底对α-CO分子反施的增强。在与CO分解态(β态)有关的谱峰位置上(结合能为5.5eV)出现两个离散的谱峰,一个在6.0eV左右,另一个在5.2eV左右。其中结合能在5.2eV左右的谱峰强度随K的覆盖度增加而增大,它的能量位置与O在K覆盖的W(100)面上吸附时的能级位置 关键词:  相似文献   

7.
Y. B. Zhao  R. Gomer 《Surface science》1991,250(1-3):81-89
The electron impact behavior of CO adsorbed on Pd1/W(110) was investigated. The desorption products observed were neutral CO, CO+, and O+. After massive electron impact residual carbon, C/W = 0.15, but not oxygen was also found, suggesting that energetic neutral O, not detected in a mass analyzer must also have been formed. Formation of β-CO, i.e., dissociated CO with C and O on the surface was not seen. The total disappearance cross section varies only slightly with coverage, ranging from 9 × 10 −18 cm2 at low to 5 × 10−18 cm2 at saturation (CO/W = 0.75). The cross section for CO+ formation varies from 4 × 10−22 cm2 at satura to 2 × 10−21 cm2 at low coverage. That for O+ formation is 1.4 × 10−22 cm2 at saturation and 2 × 10−21 cm2 Threshold energies are similar to those found previously [J.C. Lin and R. Gomer, Surf. Sci. 218 (1989) 406] for CO/W(110) and CO/Cu1/W(110) which suggests similar mechanisms for product formation, with the exception of β-CO on clean W(110). It is argued that the absence or presence of β-CO in ESD hinges on its formation or absence in thermal desorption, since electron impact is likely to present the surface with vibrationally and rotationally activated CO in all cases; β-CO formation only occurs on surfaces which can dissociate such CO. It was also found that ESD of CO led to a work function increase of the remaining Pd1/W(110) surface of 500 meV, which could be annealed out only at 900 K. This is attributed to surface roughness, caused by recoil momentum of energetic desorbing entities.  相似文献   

8.
The infrared spectrum of chemisorbed α-CO on polycrystalline tungsten has been studied using ultrahigh vacuum techniques. The α-CO state has been spectroscopically resolved into two states, designated α1-CO (wavenumber ~2128 cm?1) and α2-CO (wavenumber ~2090 cm?1). α2-CO adsorbs predominantly in the first stages of α-CO adsorption; α1-CO forms primarily at high α-CO coverages at the partial expense of α2-CO. α1-CO is found to desorb at a slightly lower temperature than α2-CO. Both α-CO states are postulated to involve sp-hybridized carbon which is bonded to the tungsten surface. These states have previously been detected in electron impact desorption measurements, where α1-CO was shown to liberate CO+ and α2-CO to liberate O+.  相似文献   

9.
Adsorption structure of CO on W and Mo at above ~800 K (β-CO) has been extensively studied in the history of surface science. Most of the previous studies concluded that CO is dissociated in the β-CO, and a tilted structure plays a role as a precursor state of the dissociation. We have recently studied valence band spectra of the β-CO on W(1 1 0), oxygen-precovered W(1 1 0) and Mo(1 1 0) using synchrotron radiation. CO-derived states with binding energies close to those of the 4σ-CO can be observed, implying a non-dissociative chemisorption in this high-temperature state. We suggest that still some additional works need to be done in order to understand adsorption structure of β-CO completely.  相似文献   

10.
The behaviour of adsorbed CO on Ru(001) flat and Ru(l,1,10) stepped surfaces in the CO pressure range between 10?6 and 101 Pa has been investigated by TDS, AES, LEED and UPS. The disproportionation of CO proceeds rapidly on the stepped surface and its apparent activation energy was obtained to be 20 kJ mol?1 at nearly zero coverage. The carbon species produced by CO disproportionation show non-uniform reactivity with 18O2 and provide four CO desorption peaks in TPR spectra, which are assigned to α-C18O,ß-C18O and those derived from carbidic and graphitic carbons. At smaller carbon coverage, only α-CO and β-CO were observed, but with increasing coverage the amount of ß-CO reaches a maximum and carbidic carbon is newly formed. Further increase of carbon deposition gives graphitic carbon. The conversion from carbidic to graphitic carbon and the dissolution into the bulk took place upon heating to 1000 K. It is remarkable that very active carbon species are converted to molecular CO through the reaction with O2 even at low temperature such as 200 K. It was also confirmed that active carbon species are formed on Ru surface during COH2 reaction.  相似文献   

11.
Chemisorption of CO on the Ni(100)p(2 × 2)O and c(2 × 2)O surfaces has been investigated by high-resolution electron energy loss spectroscopy (EELS) and low-energy electron diffraction (LEED). At 175 K CO adsorption on Ni(100)p(2 × 2)O saturates at about 1 L exposure in a structure interpreted to be Ni(100)p(2 × 2)O—p(2 × 2)CO. The CO layer is stable at 175 K but desorbs readily around 300 K. The EEL spectrum for p(2 × 2)CO shows vibrational losses at 46 meV and 245 meV interpreted to be due to excitations of the Ni-C and C-O stretching vibrations of CO molecules bridge bonded to two nearest neighbour Ni atoms. This interpretation is also supported by the LEED observations. For the preceeding dilute CO layer the vibrational loss spectrum reveals CO adsorption both to Ni bridge sites and hollow sites. At 175 K CO does only adsorb stationary on p(2 × 2)O defects in the Ni(100)c(2 × 2)O surface and not at all on epitaxially grown NiO(111) and (100) surfaces.  相似文献   

12.
The frequency of the v-CO stretching vibration measured by HRELS has been followed as a function of the CO coverage and in the presence of coadsorbed hydrocarbons on the Ni(111) face. The v-CO frequency shifts continuously from 225 meV (1814 cm?1) to 237 meV (1911 cm?1) when the CO coverage increases from 0 to 0.41. Coadsorption of electron donor molecules, such as ethylene and benzene, generates a significant lowering of the v-CO frequency. Results are discussed in terms of the back donation of metallic electrons into the 2π 1 antibonding orbitals of CO, the dipole-dipole coupling and the coordination number of the CO adsorbed molecules. The back donation is found to play the major role in the range of coverage explored but we cannot exclude some contribution of a dipole-dipole coupling effect.  相似文献   

13.
The observation of adsorbate vibrational energies in the range, 30 ?, hvvib ? 1000 meV, by electron-energy-loss spectroscopy, provides detailed information on the geometry of atomic and molecular complexes. The “surface normal dipole selection rule”, is discussed and illustrated with results obtained for CO and C2H2 adsorption on the principal low-index faces of tungsten, viz.: W(100), W(110) and W(111) using a high-resolution electron reflection spectrometer. Specifically, the behaviour of chemisorbedd diatomic carbon monoxide and polyatomic acetylene is compared as a function of coverage and surface crystallography. Comparison is made with the spectral information obtained by reflection infrared spectroscopy and recent ultraviolet photoelectron spectroscopy studies of the chemisorption binding energies. The energy loss spectra are discussed in terms of current adsorbate models and the possible formation of “distorted rehybridized surface molecular complexes” based on molecular orbital theories of organometallic compounds.  相似文献   

14.
The adsorption energies of carbon monoxide chemisorbed at various sites on a tungsten (100) surface have been calculated by extended Hückel molecular orbital theory (EHMO). The concept of a “surface molecule” in which CO is bonded to an array of tungsten atoms Wn has been employed. Dissociative adsorption in which C occupies a four-fold, five-coordination site and O occupies either a four- or two-fold site has been found to be the most stable form for CO on a W surface. Stable one-fold and two-fold sites of molecularly adsorbed CO have also been found in which the CO group is normal to the surface plane and the C atom is nearest the surface. Adsorption energies and molecular orbitals for the stable molecularly and dissociatively adsobred CO sites are compared with the experimental data on various types of adsorbed CO, i.e., virgin-, α-, and β-CO. Models are suggested for each of these adsorption types. The strongest bonding interactions occur between the CO 5σ orbital and the totally symmetric 5d and 6s orbitals of the Wn cluster. Possible mechanisms for conversion of molecularly adsorbed CO to dissociatively adsorbed CO are proposed and the corresponding activation energies are estimated.  相似文献   

15.
As a test of the value of various electron spectroscopies and their combination for the characterisation of adsorption states, UPS valence spectra, XPS core spectra (O (1s) and C (1s)) and core satellite spectra (O (1s)), and X-ray induced Auger spectra (O KLL) were measured for various adsorption layers of CO on W(110) prepared at and above room temperature and, for comparison, of oxygen on the same surface. Virgin- and β-CO can readily be distinguished in all four kinds of spectra, while α-CO shows spectra very similar to those of virgin-CO. The conversion of virgin- to β-CO and their desorption can be followed in some detail. For all four techniques, the oxygen derived spectra of β-CO are identical to those of adsorbed oxygen, at about half the intensity. This makes it very likely that CO is dissociated in the β-layer on W(110). Virgin- and α-CO show the typical features of molecularly-adsorbed CO.  相似文献   

16.
The hydrogen-induced reconstruction on a high step density W(001) crystal, (2×2)R45°-H, with steps oriented parallel to the [110] and ~ 28 Å average terrace width has been investigated using LEED symmetry, beam shape analyses, and EELS. The symmetry of the LEED pattern is observed to change from p2mg for the (2×2)R45° clean surface reconstruction to c2mm for the commensurate phase (2×2)R45°-H reconstruction. Correspondingly, the shapes of the half-order beams indicate that the hydrogen-induced reconstruction domains are much less elongated than the clean surface domains. A splitting of each half-order beam into four beams at higher exposures indicates the existence of two domains of the incommensurate phase. A commensurate phase v1 vibrational loss peak centered at 160 meV in the EELS spectrum broadens on the low-energy side during the incommensurate phase and then shifts toward 130 meV and narrows as the (1×1)-H saturation structure develops. These observations imply that there is no long-range inhibition ( ~ 20 Å) to the formation of either commensurate or incommensurate phase; hydrogen induces a switching of the atomic displacements from 〈110〉 directions on a clean surface to 〈100〉 directions, even with steps oriented parallel to the [110]; and in the incommensurate phase there is a distribution of hydrogen site geometries with the most probable geometry more like the commensurate phase geometry than the saturation phase geometry.  相似文献   

17.
High Resolution Electron Energy Loss Spectroscopy has been extended to study also the excitonic (low lying electronic) transitions of physisorbed rare gas atoms (Ar, Xe) and diatomic molecules (N2, CO) on Ag(111) and Al(111) surfaces at ~20K. Electron Loss Spectra were performed using a pair of hemispherical analyzers mounted at a fixed scattering angle (90°). This spectrometer allowed high transmission in the range of 0–15eV loss energies and incident beam energies up to 2OeV. AES, LEED and UV Photoemission (HeI) were also used in situ to characterize these surfaces and to identify the adsorbed gases and delineate their absolute coverage regimes.In contrast to optical absorption experiments, we observe both, optical (dipole) forbidden and allowed electronic transitions which show vibrational line structure for condensed multilayers. By comparison to gas phase data we find only weak perturbations in the condensed state. The observed electronic excitations show changes in intensity and FWHM depending on the coverage of the adsorbed gases.The FWHM of the electronic excitations of CO and N2 adsorbed in the monolayer regime is larger than in multilayers. Nitrogen, on both surfaces exhibits an increase from 60meV to 120meV (FWHM) whereas for CO the vibronic features are broadened out leaving peaks with FWHM of ~1eV.The intensities of the electronic losses for all gases are smaller in the first monolayer than in the second or in multilayers. At submonolayer coverage the loss intensifies due to electronic excitations are strongly reduced and no longer observable although vibrational bands and photoelectron spectra show the presence of physisorbed adsorbates.Our results will be compared to optical absorption experiments (ref.1) on similar systems and to atom-on-jellium calculations (ref.2).  相似文献   

18.
The vibrational modes induced by CO on W(001) at temperatures ? 350 K are detected by means of electron energy loss spectroscopy with resolution in the 6–7 meV range. Two β adsorption regimes are identified depending on coverage. Heating at various increasing temperatures reveals coverage dependant irreversible surface structure modifications. The β spectra after adsorption or desorption are discussed in terms of the usual questions of multiple β states, dissociation, and reconstruction. The α1 and α2 states are detected both by their WC and CO frequencies. A small signal is assigned to a new a-state, named α3, which may explain some thermal desorption results.  相似文献   

19.
CO adsorption on Pt(111) and vicinal Pt(111) surfaces has been studied by means of work function variation and He scattering measurements. AES and LEED were used mainly for correlations with other work. Special attention has been paid to the low coverage regime (θco < 0.1) with emphasis on surface structural dependencies. The minimum of the work function versus CO exposure curve occurs at a coverage less than 11% on “kink-free” surfaces. This is much lower than the hitherto commonly accepted value of 33%, and does not relate to any observed LEED superstructure. The value of Δφmin depends strongly on the surface structure. For an “ideal” Pt(111) surface with a step density less than 10?3 at a temperature of 300 K, Δφmin = ?240 meV. The scattering cross section Σ of CO adsorbed on Pt(111) for 63 meV He is typically > 250 Å2, i.e. much larger than expected from the Van der Waals radii of He and CO. For two nominal Pt(111) surfaces with step densities of 10?2 and less than 10?3, respectively, the measured Σ values varied by a factor of three. This can be explained by preferential CO occupation of defect sites, which are already not “seen” by thermal helium. By comparing results on a stepped (997) and a kinked (12 11 9) Pt surface with similar defect densities, the kinks are proven to play a decisive role. They probably form saddles in the recently proposed activation barrier for migration between terrace and step sites.  相似文献   

20.
The chemisorption of CO on the Pt atoms of an initially (1 × 3) reconstructed Pt0.98Cu0.02(110) surface at ~ 373 K can lead to the formation of a (1 × 1) surface. Comparisons are made with (1 × 3)-CO surfaces formed by CO exposures at 293 or 155 K. Thermal desorption shows that the (1 × 1)-CO surface has an enhanced population of high temperature CO peak ( ~ 543 K) from Pt sites. The CO-induced structural conversion also leads to a decrease in the subsequent CO uptake on the low temperature Pt sites and on the Pt-Cu “mixed” sites, with a concomitant increase in adsorption on the Cu-like sites. Such a reduction in the number of the Pt-Cu “ mixed” sites is also reflected in the CO-induced changes of the Cu 3d-derived states and the Cu 2p32 core levels. A dynamic interplay between chemisorption and surface structure is thus demonstrated.  相似文献   

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