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1.
Flash desorption mass spectrometry and Auger electron spectroscopy are used to compare the binding states, desorption and adsorption kinetics, and adsorbate densities on the (111), (100), (110), (211), and (210) crystal planes of clean Pt. Desorption obeys first order kinetics for all states with activation energies of the most tightly bound states varying from 36 kcal mole?1 on (211) and (210) to 26 kcal mole?1 on (110) and (111). The sticking coefficient is nearly unity on (110) and (210) and is 0.24 on (100). Multiple binding state (or breaks in the desorption activation energy versus coverage) are observed on all planes. The saturation CO density at 300 K is highest on the (100), (210), and (211) planes and lowest on (110). Properties of (210) and (211) cannot be explained simply in terms of sites on the other planes, and adsorption indicates that none of the planes facet. Previous models of CO on (111) and (110) are compared with present results, and structures are suggested for the other planes.  相似文献   

2.
Thermal desorption spectroscopy (TDS) has been used to study the chemisorption of CO, O2, and h2 on Pt. It has been found that TDS is quite sensitive to local surface structure. Three single crystal and two polycrystalline Pt surfaces were studied. One single crystal was cut to expose the smooth, hexagonally close-packed plane of the fee Pt crystal (the (111) surface). The other two single crystals were cut to expose stepped surfaces consisting of smooth, hexagonally close-packed terraces six atoms wide separated by one atom high steps (the 6(111) × (100) and 6(111) × (111) surfaces). Only one predominant desorption state was observed for CO and H adsorbed on the smooth (111) single crystal surface, while two predominant desorption states were observed for these gases adsorbed on the stepped single crystal surfaces. The low temperature desorption states on the stepped surfaces are attributed to desorption from the terraces, while the high temperature desorption states are attributed to desorption from the steps. TDS of CO from the polycrystalline foils exhibited some desorption states which were similar to those observed on the stepped single crystal surfaces, indicating the presence of adsorption sites on the polycrystalline foils that were similar to the terrace and step sites on the stepped single crystals. In general, these results suggest a high density of defect sites on the polycrystalline foils which can not be attributed simply to adsorption at grain boundaries. Oxygen was found to adsorb well on the stepped single crystals and on the polycrystalline foils, but not on the smooth (111) single crystal, under the conditions of these experiments. This is attributed to a higher sticking probability for dissociative O2 adsorption at steps or defects than on terraces.  相似文献   

3.
Nitric oxide desorption and reaction kinetics are compared on the (111), (110),and (100) planes of platinum using temperature programmed desorption mass spectrometry. NO exhibits large crystallographic anisotropies with the (100) plane having stronger bonding and much higher decomposition activity than the (110) or (111) planes. The desorption activation energies for the major tightly bound states are 36, 33.5, and 25 kcal mole?1 on the (100), (110), and (111) planes respectively. Pre-exponential factors for these states on the (110) and (111) planes are 1 × 1016±0.5s?1. The major tightly bound state on the (100) plane dissociates to yield 50% N2 and O2, but all other states all planes desorb without significant decomposition. The fraction decomposed is less than 2% on the Pt(111) surface.  相似文献   

4.
Adsorbed hydrogen and water were measured during the hydrogen evolution reaction (HER) on the low and high index planes of Pt in 0.5 M H2SO4 using infrared reflection absorption spectroscopy. Hydrogen is adsorbed at the atop site (atop H) on Pt(110) during the HER, whereas adsorbed hydrogen at the asymmetric bridge site (bridge H) is found on Pt(100). The band intensity of the adsorbed hydrogen depends on temperature, indicating that the bands are due to the intermediate species for the HER. The band of the atop H appears on stepped surfaces with (110) step, whereas the asymmetric bridge H is observed on Pt(211) = 3(111)–(100) and Pt(311) = 2(111)–(100) that have (100) step. The absence of the atop H on Pt(100), Pt(211), and Pt(311) can be attributed to the relative stability of the bridge site.  相似文献   

5.
Ammonia adsorption, desorption and decomposition to H2 and N2 has been studied on the flat (111) and stepped (557) single crystal faces of platinum using molecular beam surface scattering techniques. Both surfaces show significant adsorption with sticking coefficients on the order of unity. The stepped (557) surface is 16 times more reactive for decomposition of ammonia to N2 and H2 than the flat (111) surface. Kinetic parameters have been determined for the ammonia desorption process from the Pt(111) surface. The mechanism of ammonia decomposition on the (557) face of platinum has been investigated.  相似文献   

6.
A molecular beam technique for the determination of sticking probabilities and surface coverages was used in earlier work to investigate the adsorption of nitrogen on tungsten {110}, {111} and {100} single crystal planes. In the present paper these studies have been extended to the {310}, {320} and {411} planes. Absolute sticking probabilities and adatom surface coverages are reported for crystal temperatures between 90 K and 960 K. Crystallographic anisotropy in this system is exemplified by zero coverage sticking probabilities with the crystal at room temperature: {110}, 1̃0?2; {111}, 0.08; {411}, 0.4; {100}, 0.59; {310}, 0.72; {320}, 0.73. Results for planes on the [001] zone are quantitatively described by a general model developed for adsorption on stepped planes as an extension to the precursor-state order-disorder model for adsorption kinetics of King and Wells. It is shown that nitrogen dissociation only takes place at vacant pairs of {100} sites, but that subsequently the chemisorbed adatoms so formed may migrate out onto {110} terraces. The results are critically analysed in terms of the available LEED and work function data for nitrogen on tungsten single crystal planes, and the general model developed by Adams and Germer.  相似文献   

7.
A detailed study of CO adsorption on Ni(100) utilizing static SIMS and a comparison of the data with surface coverage data from the literature shows that there is a linear relationship between CO coverage and the peak intensity ratios (MCO+/M+ and M2CO+/M+2) of the CO-containing secondary ions, in the region of coverage below which the adlayer becomes compressed. Adsorption isobares were obtained using the intensity ratios and from these, adsorption isosteres were derjved to give heats of adsorption as a function of coverage. These data are in very close agreement with the literature. Confirmatory data were obtained for this relationship for CO adsorption on polycrystalline Ni, Pd, Pt and Cu and Cu(100). The application of this technique of surface coverage measurements to a study of the extent to which H2S coadsorption reduces the coverage of adsorbed CO on Ni(110), (100) and (111) shows that these faces are poisoned in the order (100) > (111) > (110). Surface coverage measurements on the non-closepacked (110) face are affected by the apparent insensitivity of SIMS to adsorbates located in the “channels”.  相似文献   

8.
A comparative study of the adsorption of several gases on a Pt(S)-[9(111) × (111)] surface was performed using LEED, Auger spectroscopy, flash desorption mass spectrometry and work function changes as surface sensitive techniques. Adsorption was found to be generally less ordered on the stepped surface than on the corresponding flat surface with the exception of the oxygen, where r well ordered overlayer in registry over many terraces was found. Absolute coverages were determined from flash desorption experiments for O2, CO and C2N2. Similar values were obtained as on flat Pt surfaces. Two different surface species seem to be formed upon adsorption of C2H4 depending on the adsorption temperature. Contrary to reports from Pt(111) surfaces conversion between the two surface species is heavily restricted on the stepped surface. Work function changes revealed nonlinear adsorbate effects where the adsorbate is electronegative with respect to the substrate. Various adsorption models are discussed in the light of complementary experimental evidence. The results of this study are compared with data available from flat Pt surfaces and possible influences of steps are discussed. No general trends, however, emerge from this comparison and it seems that eventual influences of steps have to be considered individually for every adsorbate.  相似文献   

9.
The H2D2 equilibration on Pt single crystals was investigated under intermediate pressure (100–400 Torr) and temperature (50–250°C), as a function of sulfur coverage. On Pt(110) and Pt(111), adsorbed sulfur modifies the kinetic parameters, activation energy and pre-exponential factor; the latter depends on the temperature on Pt(110) only. The clean Pt(110) face was found to be 5 times more active than the clean Pt(111). On both faces, adsorption of sulfur induces electronic effects on the neighbouring reactional sites. The difference in the behaviour of the two faces and a clear influence of the arrangement of the adsorbed sulfur atoms, deduced from LEED diagrams, tend to prove the structure dependency of the H2D2 reaction. A consistent reaction mechanism could be proposed, involving the dissociative adsorption and surface recombination of hydrogen and deuterium, and the reaction between adsorbed molecules for high sulfur coverages. The value of the sulfur coverage which makes the platinum inactive towards H2D2 is lower for the (111) than for the (110) orientation; this is in correlation with the roughness of the surface; the denser at atomic scale a surface is, the further is the extent of the lateral interactions due to adsorbed sulfur.  相似文献   

10.
The growth and chemisorptive properties of monolayer films of Ag and Au deposited on both the Pt(111) and the stepped Pt(553) surfaces were studied using Auger electron spectroscopy (AES), thermal desorption spectroscopy (TDS), and low energy electron diffraction (LEED). AES studies indicate that the growth of Au on Pt(111) and Pt(553) and Ag on Pt(111) proceeds via a Stranski-Krastanov mechanism, whereas the growth of Ag on the Pt(553) surface follows a Volmer-Weber mechanism. Au dissolves into the Pt crystal bulk at temperatures > 800 K, whereas Ag desorbs at temperatures > 900 K. TDS studies of Ag-covered Pt surfaces indicate that the AgPt bond (283 kJ mol?1) is ~25 kJ mol?1 stronger than the AgAg bond (254 kJ mol?1). On the Pt(553) surface the Au atoms are uniformly distributed between terrace and step sites, but Ag preferentially segregates to the terraces. The decrease in CO adsorption on the Pt crystal surfaces is in direct proportion to the Ag or Au coverage. No CO adsorption could be detected for Ag or Au coverages above one monolayer at 300 K and 10?8 Torr. The heat of adsorption of CO on Pt is unaltered by the presence of Ag or Au.  相似文献   

11.
The adsorption of potassium and the coadsorption of potassium and oxygen on the Pt(111) and stepped Pt(755) crystal surfaces were studied by AES, LEED, and TDS. Pure potassium adlayers were found by LEED to be hexagonally ordered on Pt(111) at coverages of θ = K0.9–;1. The monolayer coverage was 5.4 × 1014K atoms/cm2 (0.36 times the atomic density of the Pt(111) surface). Orientational reordering of the adlayers, similar to the behavior of noble gas phase transitions on metals, was observed. The heat of desorption of K decreased, due to depolarization effects, from 60 kcal/mole at θK <0.1, to 25 kcal/mole at θK = 1 on both Pt(111) and Pt(755). Exposure to oxygen thermally stabilizes a potassium monolayer, increasing the heat of desorption from 25 to 50 kcal/mole. Both potassium and oxygen were found to desorb simultaneously indicating strong interactions in the adsorbed overlayer. LEED results on Pt(111) further indicate that a planar K2O layer may be formed by annealing coadsorbed potassium and oxygen to 750 K.  相似文献   

12.
A probe-hole field emission microscope was used to investigate the crystallographic specificity of ammonia adsorption at 200 and 300 K on (110), (100), (211) and (111) molybdenum crystal planes. Chemisorbed NH3 causes a large work function decrease, especially at 200 K in agreement with an associative adsorption model which can also explain that this decrease is more important on the crystal planes of highest work function (At 200 K, Δφ = ?2.25 eV on Mo(110) compared to Δφ = ?1.55 eV on Mo (111). The decomposition of NH3 was followed by measuring the work function changes for stepwise heating of the Mo tip covered with NH3 at 200 K. On the four studied planes NH3 decomposition and H2 desorption are completed at about 400 K. Δφ changes above 400 K depend on the crystal plane and have been related to two different nitrogen surface states. No inactive plane towards NH3 adsorption and decomposition has been found but the noted crystallographic anisotropy in this low pressure study is relevant to the structure sensitive character of the NH3 decomposition and synthesis reactions.  相似文献   

13.
E. Bauer  H. Poppa 《Surface science》1983,127(2):243-254
The adsorption of oxygen on a Mo{110} surface and four vicinal planes with steps parallel to 〈100〉, 〈110〉 and 〈111〉 directions, is studied by Auger electron spectroscopy (AES) and low energy electron diffraction (LEED). The work has the goal to elucidate whether O adsorption on Mo{110} is really as different from O adsorption on W{110} as reported, and what is the cause of the apparent discrepancies between the various reported sticking coefficients on stepped surfaces.  相似文献   

14.
The adsorption of nitrogen on 211, 111, 100 and 110 tungsten planes has been studied by means of the probe-hole emission technique over a wide range of temperatures. The field emission tube was attached to a molecular beam system. This technique enabled deposition of strictly controlled doses of nitrogen. It has been found that on the 211 plane three states of nitrogen γ, α and β exist. In the γ state molecules of opposite polarity are present. These correspond to the γ+ and γ?. The α state undergoes transformation at about 300 K to a more stable β state. β nitrogen leaves the 211 plane through surface diffusion in the temperature region 600–700K. Results obtained on the 111 plane in the low temperature region confirm previous findings on the existence of γ and α states. At higher temperatures the concentration of nitrogen in the β state increases as a result of migration from the 211 plane. There is some evidence as to the existence of two high energetic states of nitrogen on the 111 and 100 planes. On the 110 plane only partial results were obtained due to field desorption.  相似文献   

15.
The thermal and electro impact behaviour of NO adsorbed on Pt(111) and Pt(110) have been studied by LEED, Auger spectroscopy, and thermal desorption. NO was found to adsorb non-dissociatively and with very similar low coverage adsorption enthalpies on the two surfaces at 300 K. In both cases, heating the adlayer resulted in partial dissociation and led to the appearance of N2 and O2 in the desorption spectra. The (111) surface was found to be significantly more active in inducing the thermal dissociation of NO, and on this surface the molecule was also rapidly desorbed and dissociated under electron impact. Cross sections for these processes were obtained, together with the desorption cross section for atomically bound N formed by dissociation of adsorbed NO. Electron impact effects were found to be much less important on the (110) surface. The results are considered in relation to those already obtained by Ertl et al. for NO adsorption on Ni(111) and Pd(111), and in particular, the unusual desorption kinetics of N2 production are considered explicitly. Where appropriate, comparisons are made with the behaviour of CO on Pt(111) and Pt(110), and the adsorption kinetics of NO on the (110) surface have been examined.  相似文献   

16.
The adsorption of hydrogen, ethylene, acetylene, cyclohexane and benzene was studied on both the (111) and stepped [6(111) × (100)] crystal surfaces of iridium. The techniques used were low energy electron diffraction, Auger electron spectroscopy, and thermal desorption mass spectrometry. At 30°C, acetylene, ethylene and benzene are adsorbed with a sticking probability near unity. The sticking probability of cyclohexane is less than 0.1 on both surfaces. Heating the (111) surface above 800°C, in the presence of the hydrocarbons, results in the formation of an ordered carbonaceous overlayer with a diffraction pattern corresponding to a (9 × 9) surface structure. No indication for ordering of the carbonaceous residue was found on the stepped iridium surface in these experimental conditions. The hydrocarbon molecules form only poorly ordered surface structures on both iridium surfaces when the adsorption is carried out at 30°C. Benzene is the only gas that can be desorbed from the surfaces in large amounts by heating. Ethylene remains largely on the surface, only a few percent is removed by heating while acetylene and cyclohexane cannot be desorbed at all. When adsorption is carried out at 30°C and the crystal is subsequently flashed to high temperature, hydrogen is liberated from the surface. The hydrogen desorption spectra from the iridium surfaces exposed to C2H4, C2H2, or C6H6 exhibit two hydrogen desorption peaks, one around 200°C and the second around 350°C. The temperatures where these peaks appear vary slightly with the type of hydrocarbon. The relative intensities of these two peaks depend strongly on the surface used. Arguments are presented that decomposition of the hydrocarbon molecules (C-H bond breaking nd possibly also C-C bond breaking) occurs easier on the stepped iridium surface than on the (111) surface. Hydrogen is desorbed at a higher temperature from an iridium surface possessing a high density of surface imperfections than from a perfect iridium (111) surface. The results are compared with those obtained previously on similar crystal surfaces of platinum. It appears that C-H bond breaking occurs more easily on iridium than on platinum.  相似文献   

17.
《Surface science》1988,206(3):L903-L912
The adsorption of CO on the reconstructed 1 × 2-Pt(110) surface causes a lifting of the reconstruction which has been studied by LEED and work function measurements. The work function initially decreases until at γ = 0.2 the lifting of the reconstruction begins. A comparison with Pt(100) and Pt(111) shows that the similar behaviour of CO-induced work function changes on all three low-index planes of Pt appears to be related with a similar binding geometry of CO adsorbed on top of a (quasi-)hexagonal configuration of Pt atoms. No hysteresis is observed in the adsorption/desorption equilibrium of CO on Pt(110). Although the energetics of the CO-induced phase transition on Pt(110) appear to be analogous to those of the phase transition 1 × 1 ⇹ hex of Pt(100), a number of differences exist between the two surfaces which can be explained by the different structural properties of the various surface phases involved.  相似文献   

18.
The adsorption of oxygen on the stepped Pt(S)-[9(111) × (111)) face has been studied by flash desorption, LEED and AES. On adsorbing oxygen the (1 × 1) LEED pattern of the clean face was transformed into a (2 × 2) pattern. A lower limit of the initial sticking coefficient of 0.06 and a saturation coverage of approximately 0.5 monolayer were determined. The flash desorption spectra exhibited two not completely resolved desorption maxima. From the peak temperatures the activation energies of desorption were estimated to be 41 and 49 kcal/mole. Under the same experimental conditions some experiments were done on a smooth (111) Pt face. However, the results did not differ significantly from those obtained on the stepped surface. In addition on the smooth (111) face the adsorption of oxygen activated in a high frequency discharge was studied. Oxidation was not observed beyond the chemisorption layer which is formed from molecular oxygen.  相似文献   

19.
The adsorption of hydrogen on Pt (100) was investigated by utilizing LEED, Auger electron spectroscopy and flash desorption mass spectrometry. No new LEED structures were found during the adsorption of hydrogen. One desorption peak was detected by flash desorption with a desorption maximum at 160 °C. Quantitative evaluation of the flash desorption spectra yields a saturation coverage of 4.6 × 1014 atoms/cm2 at room temperature with an initial sticking probability of 0.17. Second order desorption kinetics was observed and a desorption energy of 15–16 kcal/mole has been deduced. The shapes of the flash desorption spectra are discussed in terms of lateral interactions in the adsorbate and of the existence of two substates at the surface. The reaction between hydrogen and oxygen on Pt (100) has been investigated by monitoring the reaction product H2O in a mass spectrometer. The temperature dependence of the reaction proved to be complex and different reaction mechanisms might be dominant at different temperatures. Oxygen excess in the gas phase inhibits the reaction by blocking reactive surface sites. At least two adsorption states of H2O have to be considered on Pt (100). Desorption from the prevailing low energy state occurs below room temperature. Flash desorption spectra of strongly bound H2O coadsorbed with hydrogen and oxygen have been obtained with desorption maxima at 190 °C and 340 °C.  相似文献   

20.
The kinetics of O2 adsorption on a clean Pt(111) surface were investigated in the temperature range 214–400°C. The oxygen coverage was measured by CO titration as well as Auger electron spectroscopy both of which show the same dependence on O2 exposure. The initial sticking coefficient on clean Pt(111) is 0.08–0.10 and decreases exponentially with increasing oxygen coverage. For θ > 0.23 a (2 × 2)-O LEED pattern was observed. The highest oxygen coverage obtained was approximately 0.45. A theoretical model was proposed which correlates the coverage dependence of the sticking coefficient with adsorbate interactions in the chemisorbed state. These interactions cause a coverage dependent activation energy of adsorption assuming the existence of a precursor state. Experiments dealing with the effect of carbon contamination on the sticking coefficient showed that the initial sticking coefficient decreases with increasing carbon coverage.  相似文献   

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