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1.
Elastic and direct-inelastic scattering as well as dissociative adsorption and associative desorption of H2 and D2 on Ni(110) and Ni(111) surfaces were studied by molecular beam techniques. Inelastic scattering at the molecular potential is dominated by phonon interactions. With Ni(110), dissociative adsorption occurs with nearly unity sticking probability s0, irrespective of surface temperature Ts and mean kinetic energy normal to the surface 〈 E 〉. The desorbing molecules exhibit a cos θe angular distribution indicating full thermal accommodation of their translation energy. With Ni(111), on the other hand, s0 is only about 0.05 if both the gas and the surface are at room temperature. s0 is again independent of Ts, but increases continuously with 〈 E⊥ 〉 up to a value of ~0.4 forE⊥ 〉 = 0.12 eV. The cos5θe angular distribution of desorbing molecules indicates that in this case they carry off excess translational energy. The results are qualitatively rationalized in terms of a two-dimensional potential diagram with an activation barrier in the entrance channel. While the height of this barrier seems to be negligible for Ni(110), it is about 0.1 eV for Ni(111) and can be overcome through high enough translational energy by direct collision. The results show no evidence for intermediate trapping in a molecular “precursor” state on the clean surfaces, but this effect may play a role at finite coverages.  相似文献   

2.
The sticking coefficient of H2/Ni(111) changes proportionally to the beam energy. The angular distribution of the probability of adsorption varies with cos3.5θ; the angular distribution of desorption is found to change as cos4.5θ at 300 K. Assuming validity of detailed balancing, the adsorption data suggest an energy distribution for desorption which agrees with existing time-of-flight measurements.  相似文献   

3.
At 300 K oxygen chemisorbs on Ag(331) with a low sticking probability, and the surface eventually facets to form a (110)?(2 × 1) O structure with ΔΦ = +0.7 eV. This facetting is completely reversible upon O2 desorption at ~570 K. The electron impact properties of the adlayer, together with the LEED and desorption data, suggest that the transition from the (110) facetted surface to the (331) surface occurs at an oxygen coverage of about two-thirds the saturation value. Chemisorbed oxygen reacts rapidly with gaseous CO at 300 K, the reaction probability per impinging CO molecule being ~0.1. At 300 K chlorine adsorbs via a mobile precursor state and with a sticking probability of unity. The surface saturates to form a (6 × 1) structure with ΔΦ = +1.6 eV. This is interpreted in terms of a buckled close-packed layer of Cl atoms whose interatomic spacing is similar to those for Cl overlayers on Ag(111) and Ag(100). Desorption occurs exclusively as Cl atoms with Ed ~ 213 kJ mol?1; a comparison of the Auger, ΔΦ, and desorption data suggests that the Cl adlayer undergoes significant depolarisation at high coverages. The interaction of chlorine with the oxygen predosed surface, and the converse oxygen-chlorine reaction are examined.  相似文献   

4.
The interactions between a molecular beam of SiO(g) and a clean and an oxidized tungsten surface were examined in the surface temperature range 600 to 1700 K by mass spectrometrically determined sticking probabilities, by flash desorption mass spectrometry (FDMS) and by Auger electron spectroscopy (AES). The sticking probability, S, of SiO has been determined as a function of coverage and of surface temperature for the clean and the oxidized tungsten surface. Over the temperature range studied and at zero coverage S = 1.0 and 0.88 for the clean and oxidized tungsten surfaces respectively. The results are consistent with both FDMS and AES. For coverage up to one monolayer there is one major adsorption state of SiO on the clean tungsten surface. FDMS shows that Tm = constant (Tm is the surface temperature at which the desorption rate is maximum) and that desorption from this state is described by a simple first order desorption process with activation energy, Ed = 85.3 kcal mole?1 and pre-exponential factor, ν = 2.1 × 1014 sec?1. AES shows that the 92 eV peak characteristic of silicon dominates. In contrast on the oxidized tungsten surface, Tm shifts to higher temperatures with increasing coverage. The data indicate a first order desorption process with a coverage dependent activation energy. At low coverage (θ ? 0.14) there is an adsorption state with Ed = 120 kcal mole?1 and ν = 7.6 × 1019, while at θ = 1.0, Ed = 141 kcal mole?1. This variation is interpreted as due to complex formation on the surface. AES shows that on oxidized tungsten, in contrast to clean tungsten, the dominant peaks occur at 64 and 78 eV, and these peaks are characteristic of higher oxidation states of silicon. Thus, it is concluded that SiO exists in different binding states on clean and oxidized tungsten surfaces.  相似文献   

5.
The chemisorption of NO on clean and Na-dosed Ag(110) has been studied by LEED, Auger spectroscopy, and thermal desorption. On the clean surface, non-dissociative adsorption into the α-state occurs at 300 K with an initial sticking probability of ~0.1, and the surface is saturated at a coverage of about 125. Desorption occurs without decomposition, and is characterised by an enthalpy of Ed ~104 kJ mol?1 — comparable with that for NO desorption from transition metals. Surface defects do not seem to play a significant role in the chemistry of NO on clean Ag, and the presence of surface Na inhibits the adsorption of αNO. However, in the presence of both surface and subsurface Na, both the strength and the extent of NO adsorption are markedly increased and a new state (β1NO) with Ed ~121 kJ mol?1 appears. Adsorption into this state occurs with destruction of the Ag(110)-(1 × 2)Na ordered phase. Desorption of β1NO occurs with significant decomposition, N2 and N2O are observed as geseous products, and the system's behaviour towards NO resembles that of a transition metal. Incorporation of subsurface oxygen in addition to subsurface Na increases the desorption enthalpy (β2NO), maximum coverage, and surface reactivity of NO still further: only about half the adsorbed layer desorbs without decomposition. The bonding of NO to Ag is discussed, and comparisons are made with the properties of α and βNO on Pt(110).  相似文献   

6.
The adsorption, desorption, and surface structural properties of Na and NO on Ag(111), together with their coadsorption and surface reactivity, have been studied by LEED, Auger spectroscopy, and thermal desorption. On the clean surface, non-dissociative adsorption of NO into the a-state occurs at 300 K with an initial sticking probability of ~0.1, saturation occurring at a coverage of ~120. Desorption occurs reversibly without decomposition and is characterised by a desorption energy of Ed ~ 103 kJ mol?1. In the coverage regime 0 < θNa < 1, sodium adsorbs in registry with the Ag surface mesh and the desorption spectra show a single peak corresponding to Ed ~ 228 kJ mol?1. For multilayer coverages (1 < θ Na < 5) a new low temperature peak appears in the desorption spectra with Ed ~ 187 kJ mol?1. This is identified with Na desorption from an essentially Na surface, and the desorption energy indicates that Na atoms beyond the first chemisorbed layer are significantly influenced by the presence of the Ag substrate. The LEED results show that Na multilayers grow as a (√7 × √7) R19.2° overlayer, and are interpreted in a way which is consistent with the above conclusion. Coadsorption of Na and NO leads to the appearance of a more strongly bound and reactive chemisorbed state of NO (β-NO) with Ed ~ 121 kJ mol?1. β-NO appears to undego surface dissociation to yield adsorbed O and N atoms whose subsequent reactions lead to the formation of N2, N2O, and O2 as gaseous products. The reactive behaviour of the system is complicated by the effects of Na and O diffusion into the bulk of the specimen, but certain invariant features permit us to postulate an overall reaction mechanism, and the results obtained here are compared with other relevant work.  相似文献   

7.
Reflection-absorption infrared spectroscopy has been combined with thermal desorption and surface coverage measurements to study nitrogen adsorption on a {111}-oriented platinum ribbon under ultrahigh vacuum conditions. Desorption spectra show a single peak (at 180 K) after adsorption at 120 K, giving a coverage-independent activation energy for desorption'of ~40 kJmol?1. The initial sticking probability at this temperature is 0.15, and the maximum uptake was ~1.1 × 1014 molecule cm?2. The adsorbed nitrogen was readily displaced by CO, h2 and O2. An infrared absorption band was observed with a peak located at 2238 ± 1 cm?1, and a halfwidth of 9 cm?1, with a molecular intensity comparable to that reported for CO on Pt{111}. The results are compared with data for chemisorption on other group VIII metals. An earlier assignment of infrared active nitrogen to B5 sites on these metals is brought into question by the present results.  相似文献   

8.
At 300 K and in the coverage regime (0<θ<13) bromine chemisorbs rapidly on Pd(111); the sticking probability and dipole moment per adatom remain constant at 0.8 ± 0.2 and 1.2 D, respectively. This stage is marked by the appearance of a √3 structure: desorption occurs exclusively as atomic Br. At higher coverages, desorption of molecular Br2 begins (desorption energy ~130 kJ mol?1) as does the nucleation and growth of PdBr2 on the surface. This latter stage is signalled by the appearance of a √2 LEED pattern and the observation of PdBr2 as a desorption product (desorption energy ~37 kJ mol?1). Some PdBr2 is also lost by surface decomposition and subsequent evaporation of atomic Br. The data indicate that the transition state to Br adatom desorption is localised and that PdBr2(a) ? Br(a) interconversion occurs; these surface species do not appear to be in thermodynamic equilibrium during the desorption process.  相似文献   

9.
The adsorption/desorption characteristics of CO, O2, and H2 on the Pt(100)-(5 × 20) surface were examined using flash desorption spectroscopy. Subsequent to adsorption at 300 K, CO desorbed from the (5×20) surface in three peaks with binding energies of 28, 31.6 and 33 kcal gmol?1. These states formed differently from those following adsorption on the Pt(100)-(1 × 1) surface, suggesting structural effects on adsorption. Oxygen could be readily adsorbed on the (5×20) surface at temperatures above 500 K and high O2 fluxes up to coverages of 23 of a monolayer with a net sticking probability to ssaturation of ? 10?3. Oxygen adsorption reconstructed the (5 × 20) surface, and several ordered LEED patterns were observed. Upon heating, oxygen desorbed from the surface in two peaks at 676 and 709 K; the lower temperature peak exhibited atrractive lateral interactions evidenced by autocatalytic desorption kinetics. Hydrogen was also found to reconstruct the (5 × 20) surface to the (1 × 1) structure, provided adsorption was performed at 200 K. For all three species, CO, O2, and H2, the surface returned to the (5 × 20) structure only after the adsorbates were completely desorbed from the surface.  相似文献   

10.
The initial interaction between an O2 molecular beam and a cleaned Fe(110) surface has been studied by a combination of Auger electron spectrometric (AES) and mass spectrometric techniques. The incident molecular beam intensity was calibrated using a stagnation detector, and the initial sticking coefficient for chemisorption was determined by mass spectrometric measurement of the transient in molecular scattering behavior observed when the cleaned surface was exposed to the molecular beam. This permitted an absolute calibration of the AES system for oxygen, and allowed comparison of the kinetic measurements of the oxygen adsorption process by the two techniques. Results indicate that the initial sticking coefficient is 0.2 ± 0.01. Oxygen is initially chemisorbed up to a coverage of 1.6 ± 0.16 × 1015 cm?2, by a process following Langmuir kinetics. Beyond this point AES studies indicate a slower rate of oxygen uptake which is independent of gas-phase oxygen pressure. The mass spectrometric studies further indicate that for a cleaned, annealed surface those oxygen molecules which are not chemisorbed are scattered in a non-diffuse manner.  相似文献   

11.
The interaction of oxygen with a Pt(110) crystal surface has been investigated by thermal desorption mass spectroscopy, LEED and AES. Adsorption at room temperature produces a β-state which desorbs at ~800 K. Complete isotopic mixing occurs in desorption from this state and it populates with a sticking probability which varies as (1 ? θ)2, both observations consistent with dissociative adsorption. The desorption is second order at low coverage but becomes first order at high coverage. The saturationcoverage is 3.5 × 1014 mol cm?2. The spectra have been computer analysed to determine the fraction desorbing by first (β1) and second (β2) order kinetics as a function of total fractional coverage θ using this fraction as the only adjustable parameter. The β1 desorption commences at θ ~ 0.25 and β1 and β2 contribute equally to the desorption at saturation. The kinetic parameters for β1 desorption were calculated from the variation of peak temperature with heating rate as ν1 = 1.7 × 109 s?1 and E1 = 32 kcal mole?1 whereas two different methods of analysis gave consistent parameters ν2 = 6.5 × 10?7 cm2 mol?1 s?1 and E2 = 29 and 30 kcal mole?1 for β2 desorption. The kinetics of desorptior are discussed in terms of the statistics for occupation of near neighbour sites. While many fea tures of the results are consistent with this picture, it is concluded that simple models considering either completely mobile or immobile adlayers with either strong or zero adatom repulsion are not completely satisfactory. The thermal desorption surface coverage has been correlated with the AES measurements and it has been possible to use the AES data for PtO as an internal standard for calibration of the AES oxygen coverage determination. At low temperature (170 K) oxygen populates an additional molecular α-state. Adsorption into the α- and β-states is competitive for the same sites and pre-saturation of the β-state at 300 K excludes the α-state. This, together with the AES observation that the adsorption is enhanced and faster at 450 than 325 K suggests a low activation energy for adsorption into the β-state.  相似文献   

12.
The effect of electron beam monitored gas adsorption on the clean Si surface is studied using Auger electron spectroscopy. It is shown that the beam affects the AES adsorption signal of CO and O2 on Si by dissociating the adsorbed molecules on the surface and subsequently promoting diffusion of atomic oxygen into the bulk. A qualitative explanation of the adsorption data is presented and the initial sticking probability of O2 on Si (111) surface is estimated to be S0 = 0.21.  相似文献   

13.
The adsorption of ammonia, hydrogen, and nitrogen on a Ru(0001) surface have been investigated by Auger electron spectroscopy, low-energy electron diffraction, and thermal flash desorption. The adsorption of ammonia on Ru(0001) can be divided into a low temperature mode (100 K) and a higher temperature mode (300–500 K). For a crystal temperature of 100 K the ammonia adsorbs into two weakly bound molecular γ states with s = 0.2. The ammonia desorbs as NH3 molecules with desorption energies of 0.32 and 0.46 eV. At 300–500 K adsorption occurs via an activated process with a low sticking probability (s ? 2 × 10?4).This adsorption is accompanied by dissociation and formation of an apparent (2 × 2) LEED pattern. Hydrogen adsorbs readily (s = 0.4) on Ru(0001) at 100 K and desorbs with 2nd order kinetics in the temperature range 350–450 K. Nitrogen does not appreciably adsorb on Ru(0001) even at 100 K; maximum nitrogen coverage obtained was estimated to be <2% of a monolayer. Changes in the ammonia flash desorption spectra after hydrogen preadsorption at 100 K will be discussed.  相似文献   

14.
Measurements of both the absolute sticking probability near normal incidence and the coverage of H2 adsorbed on W(100) at ~ 300K have been made using a precision gas dosing system; a known fraction of the molecules entering the vacuum chamber struck the sample crystal before reaching a mass spectrometer detector. The initial sticking probability S0 for H2/W(100) is 0.51 ± 0.03; the hydrogen coverage extrapolated to S = 0 is 2.0 × 1015 atoms cm?2. The initial sticking probability S0 for D2/W(100) is 0.57 ± 0.03; the isotope effect for sticking probability is smaller than previously reported. Electron stimulated desorption (ESD) studies reveal that the low coverage β2 hydrogen state on W(100) yields H+ ions upon bombardment by 100 eV electrons; the ion desorption cross section is ~ 1.8 × 10?23 cm2. The H+ ion cross section at saturation hydrogen coverage when the β1 state is fully populated is ? 10?25 cm2. An isotope effect in electron stimulated desorption of H+ and D+ has been found. The H+ ion yield is ? 100 × greater than the D+ ion yield, in agreement with theory.  相似文献   

15.
The adsorption of O2 on Ag(111) between 150 and 650 K has been studied with thermal desorption spectroscopy, Auger and photoelectron spectroscopies, and low-energy electron diffraction. A molecularly adsorbed O2 species is populated with extremely low sticking probability (~ 5 X 10?6) at 150 K. This species desorbs, with little dissociation, at 217 K. An atomically adsorbed species, with an O(1s) BE of 528.2 eV, is populated at 490 K with a sticking probability near 10?6. This species exists in islands of local coverage θO ? 0.41, displaying a p(4 X 4)-O LEED pattern. It associatively desorbs at 579 K as O2, and can be titrated at room temperature with CO to produce CO2. There is also evidence for a subsurface oxygen species which reactivates below 600 K. Surface carbonate (CO3,a) can be produced from Oa and CO2 gas. These results are compared with similar species on Ag(110). A kinetic model is developed which describes the interaction of O2 with these surfaces over a broad range of temperatures, and provides energetic values for the O2/Ag interaction potential.  相似文献   

16.
Markus Kratzer 《Surface science》2007,601(16):3456-3463
The angular distribution of desorbing deuterium molecules was investigated for the clean Pd(1 1 1) surface and for modified Pd(1 1 1) surfaces, either pre-covered with 0.2 ML potassium or with an ultra-thin V2O3 surface oxide. The palladium sample was part of a permeation source and the angular distribution was measured by lateral displacement of the sample in front of a differentially pumped flux detector. For the clean surface at 523 K, the angular distribution is close to a cosine distribution, but changes to a cos1.9Θ distribution at 700 K. Potassium on the surface alters the angular distribution to a cos3Θ function at 523 K. The ultra-thin vanadium oxide layer on the Pd(1 1 1) surface has no significant influence on the angular distribution of deuterium desorption. The experimental results were compared with existing data of the energy dependent sticking coefficient and the energy distribution of the desorption flux as measured by time-of-flight spectroscopy. This made it possible to get information on the applicability of detailed balance and normal energy scaling.  相似文献   

17.
《Surface science》1996,366(1):19-28
Coverage-dependent sticking probabilities and second-order rate constants for recombinative desorption of hydrogen from Rh(111) have been measured using molecular beam relaxation spectroscopy (MBRS) and time-resolved specular helium scattering. The sticking probability follows second-order Langmuir coverage dependence, with s0 equal to 0.01 ± 0.005. Under isothermal and nearly isosteric conditions over the coverage range 0.2–0.7 ML, the second-order rate constant for desorption is essentially independent of hydrogen coverage, in contrast to kinetic parameters determined from thermal desorption spectra.  相似文献   

18.
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   

19.
This paper is the first of three articles devoted to the CO/Mo(110) chemisorption. The experimental study of adsorption and desorption kinetics was performed by several methods: thermal desorption, low energy electron diffraction and Auger electron spectroscopy. The adsorption of CO on Mo(110) presents two different states. For these two states the desorption kinetics are first order ones, the desorption energies and frequency factors have been determined (E1 = 99 kcal mole?1, E2 = 50 kcal mole?1, v1 = 1019 s?1, v2, = 5 × 1010 s?1). The dependence of sticking coefficient on surface coverage θ was investigated and was found different for the two states of adsorption. LEED shows that the adsorption is not ordered. AES investigation suggests that in the two states C and O have different positions with respect to MO atoms.  相似文献   

20.
The adsorption of oxygen on Rh(111) at 100 K has been studied by TDS, AES, and LEED. Oxygen adsorbs in a disordered state at 100 K and orders irreversibly into an apparent (2 × 2) surface structure upon heating to T? 150 K. The kinetics of this ordering process have been measured by monitoring the intensity of the oxygen (1, 12) LEED beam as a function of time with a Faraday cup collector. The kinetic data fit a model in which the rate of ordering of oxygen atoms is proportional to the square of the concentration of disordered species due to the nature of adparticle interactions in building up an island structure. The activation energy for ordering is 13.5 ± 0.5 kcalmole. At higher temperatures, the oxygen undergoes a two-step irreversible disordering (T? 280 K) and dissolution (T?400K) process. Formation of the high temperature disordered state is impeded at high oxygen coverages. Analysis of the oxygen thermal desorption data, assuming second order desorption kinetics, yields values of 56 ± 2 kcal/ mole and 2.5 ± 10?3 cm2 s?1 for the activation energy of desorption and the pre-exponential factor of the desorption rate coefficient, respectively, in the limit of zero coverage. At non-zero coverages the desorption data are complicated by contributions from multiple states. A value for the initial sticking probability of 0.2 was determined from Auger data at 100 K applying a mobile precursor model of adsorption.  相似文献   

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