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1.
Structures of carbon monoxide layers on the oxygen-modified Mo(1 1 0) and Mo(1 1 2) surfaces have been investigated by means of density-functional (DFT) calculations. It is found that CO molecules adsorb at hollow sites on the O/Mo(1 1 0) surface and nearly atop Mo atoms on the O/Mo(1 1 2) surface. The favorable positions for adsorption are shown to be near protrusions of electron density above the Mo surface atoms. The presence of oxygen on the molybdenum surface significantly reduces the binding energy of the CO molecule with the substrate; on the oxygen-saturated Mo(1 1 0) surface, the adsorption of CO is completely blocked. The calculated local densities of states (LDOS) demonstrate that the O 2s peak for O adsorbed on Mo(1 1 0) surface is at −19 eV (with respect to the Fermi level), while for the oxygen atom of an adsorbed CO molecule the related 3σ molecular orbital gives rise to a peak at −23 eV. This difference stems from the bonding of the O atom either with Mo surface for adsorbed O or with C atom in adsorbed CO, and therefore the position of the O 2s peak in photoemission spectra can serve as a convincing argument in favor of either the presence or absence of the CO dissociation on Mo surfaces.  相似文献   

2.
3.
Thermal desorption spectra taken after adsorption of carbon monoxide at room temperature on W(210) show sequential formation with increasing coverage of strongly bound β2 and β1 binding states, correlated to the sequential formation of P(2 × 1) and (1 × 1) adsorbate structures as observed by LEED. Adsorption at room temperature gives a poorly ordered arrangement of adsorbed CO molecules, but well-ordered structures are produced by subsequent anneal. For adsorption without anneal the work function increases monotonically with coverage to a maximum of Δφ = + 0.70 eV at saturation coverage of 1 monolayer. For adsorption followed by anneal the work function dependence upon coverage is less simple, with even a decrease of work function at coverages less than a quarter monolayer. LEED intensity-voltage measurements from P(2 × 1)CO and P(2 × 1)N structures suggest that CO molecules occupy the sites of 4-fold symmetry upon which nitrogen is believed to be adsorbed. The distinction between the β2 and β1 states of adsorbed CO is attributed to heterogeneity induced by the reduction in binding energy of a CO molecule when its nearest-neighbor sites are occupied.  相似文献   

4.
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   

5.
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   

6.
The adsorption of ethylene has been studied on stoichiometric NiO(100) and on surfaces reduced to 40% of the stoichiometric oxygen content. The adsorption process was followed with XPS, Auger spectroscopy and LEED at substrate temperatures of 200 to 500 K and at ethylene pressure of 5 × 10?7 Torr. At 200 K, two distinct ethylene species are observed on stoichiometric NiO(100). The first species saturates at 0.02 ML after 200 L and is adsorbed molecularly, interacting with both nickel and oxygen sites. A condensed species then forms which does not saturate for exposures up to 2100 L. Both adsorb reversibly with all traces of carbon absent by 270 K. At 200–300 K, reduced NiO(100) also adsorbs two molecular ethylene species, although with a preference for nickel sites. However, the uptake of ethylene increases only slightly with surface reduction. Adsorption is no longer reversible for the reduced surface and increasing the substrate temperature causes fragmentation of the adsorbed ethylene with a concomitant reduction in lattice oxygen content.  相似文献   

7.
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   

8.
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   

9.
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   

10.
《Surface science》1997,383(1):57-68
Ethylene adsorbed on Mo(100) and oxygen-covered Mo(100) can thermally decompose to yield hydrogen and adsorbed carbon, desorb molecularly, self-hydrogenate to produce ethane or dissociate to form adsorbed C1 species which can hydrogenate to form methane. Complete thermal decomposition of the ethylene is proposed to take place on the four-fold sites on Mo(100) since the hydrogen yield decreases linearly with oxygen coverage. The ethylene desorption activation energy increases with increasing oxygen coverage suggesting that ethylene bonds to Mo(100) predominantly by donation of π electrons to the molybdenum surface. The ethylene hydrogenation activation increases as a function of oxygen coverage in accord with this effect. The yield of methane also varies with oxygen coverage so that no methane desorption is detected for clean Mo(100) but the yield increases with oxygen coverage reaching a maximum at a coverage of ≈0.6 ML and decreasing at higher coverages. Photoelectron spectroscopy results suggest that adsorbed oxygen increases the dissociative probability of ethylene. In addition, experiments in which carbenes are grafted onto the surface by decomposing methylene iodide show that carbenes are stabilized by the addition of oxygen to the surface. These effects both explain the increase in methane yield as a function of increasing oxygen coverage. The decrease at higher coverage is likely due, at least in part, to the lack of hydrogen. The ethane yield also decreases at higher coverages due to a similar effect.  相似文献   

11.
E.I. Ko  R.J. Madix 《Surface science》1981,112(3):373-385
The reactions of formaldehyde and methanol have been studied on clean, carburized, and oxidized Mo(100) surfaces using temperature programmed reaction spectroscopy (TPRS). The thermal cracking of ethylene at 550 K and the adsorption of molecular oxygen at 1050 K were used to carburize and oxidize, respectively, the clean surface to saturation. Both the carbide and oxide surfaces showed (1×1) LEED features. Methanol decomposed to give hydrogen atoms and methoxy intermediates upon adsorption on the clean Mo(100) surface at 200 K. The methoxy intermediate was stable up to 340 K. Adsorbed carbon and oxygen suppressed the dissociation of the hydroxyl hydrogen from the alcohol and yielded a significantly different activity and selectivity compared to the very reactive clean surface. The binding energies for both formaldehyde and methanol on the three surfaces were similar, demonstrating the weak sensitivity of donor-acceptor bonds to surface modifiers. The results in this study were very similar to those previously observed for W(100) though different adlayer structures were present. This similarity suggested that the modification in surface reactivity was primarily a compositional effect.  相似文献   

12.
We have studied the adsorption structure of acetic anhydride on a TiO2(1 1 0) surface using XPS (X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy), LEED (low energy electron diffraction) and HREELS (high resolution electron energy loss spectroscopy) to determine the origins of the unique adsorption properties of carboxylic acids on a TiO2(1 1 0) surface. The C 1s XPS data indicated that the saturation carbon amount of adsorbed acetic anhydride was 12 ± 3% larger than that of the adsorbed acetic acid. LEED showed p(2 × 1) weak spots for the acetic anhydride adsorbed surface. The HREELS spectra revealed the dissociative adsorption of acetic anhydride. Based on these findings, we concluded that the neutralization of the bridging oxygen atoms associated with the dissociative adsorption is necessary for the stable adsorption of carboxylates on the 5-fold Ti sites.  相似文献   

13.
Carbon monoxide adsorption has been studied on a series of presulfided Ni(100) surfaces using vibrational spectroscopy. The sulfided Ni(100) surfaces were characterized using Auger electron spectroscopy and low energy electron diffraction, binding states were isolated by heating CO-dosed surfaces to prescribed temperatures, corresponding to the desorption temperatures of the CO. Adsorption of CO on Ni(100) with a p(2 × 2) array of sulfur lead to CO stretching frequencies of 1740 and 1930 cm?1 corresponding to desorption temperatures of 370 and 290 K, respectively. Adsorption of CO into the c(2 × 2)S structure resulted in a CO stretching frequency of 2115 cm?1 and a desorption peak near 140 K. The binding sites on the p(2 × 2)S structure were interpreted as metal four-fold hollows and bridging sites. The high frequency state was interpreted as weak bonding into the four-fold hollow with back donation into the π1 orbital on CO restricted by stearic hindrance due to adsorbed sulfur. Both the thermal desorption and vibrational results indicated that local CO-sulfur interactions are dominant on the presulfided Ni(100) surface in the coverage range studied.  相似文献   

14.
The adsorption of CO, O2, and H2O was studied on both the (111) and [6(111) × (100)] crystal faces of iridium. The techniques used were LEED, AES, and thermal desorption. Marked differences were found in surface structures and heats of adsorption on these crystal faces. Oxygen is adsorbed in a single bonding state on the (111) face. On the stepped iridium surface an additional bonding state with a higher heat of adsorption was detected which can be attributed to oxygen adsorbed at steps. On both (111) and stepped iridium crystal faces the adsorption of oxygen at room temperature produced a (2 × 1) surface structure. Two surface structures were found for CO adsorbed on Ir(111); a (√3 × √3)R30° at an exposure of 1.5–2.5 L and a (2√3 × 2√3)R30° at higher coverage. No indication for ordering of adsorbed CO was found on the Ir(S)-[6(111) × (100)] surface. No significant differences in thermal desorption spectra of CO were found on these two faces. H2O is not adsorbed at 300 K on either iridium crystal face. The reaction of CO with O2 was studied on Ir(111) and the results are discussed. The influence of steps on the adsorption behaviour of CO and O2 on iridium and the correlation with the results found previously on the same platinum crystal faces are discussed.  相似文献   

15.
Changes in the nature of the binding site of chemisorbed CO on the Rh{111} and Rh{331} single crystal surfaces during adsorption and desorption have been monitored by X-ray Photoelectron Spectroscopy (XPS) and Low Energy Electron Diffraction (LEED). Two bonding states of molecular CO have been identified from the O 1s photoemission line. These states are assigned as atop and bridge-bonded species and are observed to be coverage and temperature dependent. On both surfaces atop sites are populated first and at higher CO coverages bridge sites are filled. On Rh{111} the bridge sites are filled at a CO coverage of θCO ~ 0.50 and their presence is correlated with a change in the LEED pattern. The presence of the step atoms on the Rh{331} surface markedly influenced the sequential filling of binding sites in comparison to that observed on the Rh{111} surface. A comparison of our data to previous Electron Energy Loss Spectroscopy (EELS) work on Rh{111} is in remarkable quantitative agreement with EELS peak heights.  相似文献   

16.
Oxygen adsorption and desorption were characterized on the kinked Pt(321) surface using high resolution electron energy loss spectroscopy, thermal desorption spectroscopy and Auger electron spectroscopy. Some dissociation of molecular oxygen occurs even at 100 K on the (321) surface indicating that the activation barrier for dissociation is smaller on the Pt(321) surface than on the Pt(111) surface. Molecular oxygen can be adsorbed at 100 K but only in the presence of some adsorbed atomic oxygen. The dominance of the v(OO) molecular oxygen stretching mode in the 810 to 880 cm?1 range indicates that the molecular oxygen adsorbs as a peroxo-like species with the OO axis parallel or nearly parallel to the surface, as observed previously on the Pt(111) surface [Gland et al., Surface Sci. 95 (1980) 587]. The existence of at least two types of peroxo-like molecular oxygen is suggested by both the unusual breadth of the v(OO) stretching mode and breadth of the molecular oxygen desorption peak. Atomic oxygen is adsorbed more strongly on the rough step sites than on the smooth (111) terraces, as indicated by the increased thermal stability of atomic oxygen adsorbed along the rough step sites. The two forms of adsorbed atomic oxygen can be easily distinguished by vibrational spectroscopy since oxygen adsorbed along the rough step sites causes a v(PtO) stretching mode at 560 cm?1, while the v(PtO) stretching mode for atomic oxygen adsorbed on the (111) terraces appears at 490 cm?1, a value typical of the (111) surface. Two desorption peaks are observed during atomic oxygen recombination and desorption from the Pt(321) surface. These desorption peaks do not correlate with the presence of the two types of adsorbed atomic oxygen. Rather, the first order low temperature peak is a result of the fact that about three times more atomic oxygen can be adsorbed on the Pt(321) surface than on the Pt(111) surface (where only a second order peak is observed). The heat of desorption for atomic oxygen decreases from about 290kJ/mol (70 kcal/mol) to about 196 kJ/mol (47 kcal/mol) with increasing coverage. Preliminary results concerning adsorption of molecular oxygen from the gas phase in an excited state are also briefly discussed.  相似文献   

17.
We have performed density functional theory calculations to understand the initial growth of graphene by studying the adsorption of carbon atoms on the oxide substrates such as magnesium oxide. For adsorption behaviors of carbon atoms on the MgO(100) surface, their adsorption geometries and binding energies are calculated. The binding of a carbon atom is the most stable at the on-top oxygen site on MgO(100). Such strong C–O binding is analyzed by examining the projected density of states. Then, we also increase the number of carbon atoms on MgO(100) to investigate their adsorption behaviors. Due to strong binding between carbon atoms, adsorbed carbon atoms form chain-like or graphene-like structures on the surface. Combined with relatively strong C–O binding, this result may explain the graphene growth on MgO(100) observed in available experiments.  相似文献   

18.
We present the results of Spin Unrestricted Hartree-Fock cluster calculation of oxygen at the four-fold, bridge and head-on surface sites. The four-fold site is the lowest energy configuration, in agreement with a LEED structure analysis, and the equilibrium distance above the surface, 0.38 Å, is close to the LEED result, 0.48 Å. These results indicate that cluster calculations may be used to corraborate the LEED analysis and in some cases to predict independently the correct adsorption geometry.  相似文献   

19.
Adsorption of CO on a Pd monolayer (ML) supported on Mo(110) has been studied using low energy electron diffraction (LEED), temperature programmed desorption (TPD), and high resolution electron energy loss spectroscopy (HREELS). Three ordered CO substructures denoted as are observed with LEED. The binding energy of C0 on the 1.0 ML Pd/Mo(110) surface is reduced by 12 kcal/mol relative to the Pd(111) surface, consistent with previous results for supported palladium monolayers on other substrates. Two vibrational states of C0 are observed near 1950 and 2050 cm−1, with the feature at the lower wavenumber having the smaller binding energy.  相似文献   

20.
Room temperature adsorption of CO on bare and carbided (111), (100) and (110) nickel surfaces has been studied by vibrational electron energy loss spectroscopy (EELS) and thermal desorption. On the clean (100) and (110) surfaces two configurations of CO adsorbed species, namely “terminal” and bridge bonded CO, are observed simultaneously. On Ni(111), only two-fold sites are involved. The presence of superficial carbon lowers markedly the bond strength of CO on Ni(111)C and Ni(110)C surfaces, while no adsorption has been detected on the Ni(100)C surface. Moreover, on the carbided Ni(110)C surface, the adsorption mode for adsorbed CO is changed with respect to the clean surface; only “terminal” CO is then observed.  相似文献   

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