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1.
In a study of CO adsorption on Pd(111) it is shown that the secondary ion mass spectrum contains information on both adsorbate site geometry and adsorbate coverage. The fractional yields of PdCO+, Pd2CO+ and Pd3CO+, as a function of CO coverage are correlated with the changing site geometries suggested by reflection IR data. A relationship between secondary ion emission and the adsorbate-adsorbate interactions revealed by IR and EELS is also demonstrated for CO adsorption on Ru(001), Ni(111) and Pd(111).  相似文献   

2.
Adsorption of CO on Ni(100) has been investigated using secondary ion mass spectrometry (SIMS) and Auger electron spectroscopy at 175 and 295 K. Interaction with polycrystalline nickel was examined at 295, 325 and 365 K. All the secondary ions, Ni+, Ni2+, NiCO+ and Ni2CO+ show large increases in intensity as CO is adsorbed but there is no simple correlation of the secondary ion species with the sequence of linear and bridge-bonded CO species expected from electron energy loss spectroscopy. Adsorption of CO at 175 K on a hydrogen saturated Ni(100) surface, which is thought to permit only bridge-bonded adsorbed CO, does not result in any enhancement of Ni2CO+. The extent of increases in secondary ion yields after CO adsorption on the nickel surfaces are primarily related to the variations in the heat of adsorption as a function of surface coverage. The presence of more weakly-held species is important in enhancing secondary ion yields.  相似文献   

3.
The chemisorption of CO on Cu, Ni and CuNi alloy surfaces was examined by SIMS, work function measurements and desorption spectroscopy. Using a dynamic SIMS technique the M+, M+2, MCO+ and M2CO+ emission at different temperatures (100–400 K) was measured as a function of CO exposure. In agreement with the work function and desorption experiments an increase of M+ and MCO+ emission due to the CO adsorption on Cu was found only at low temperatures (100–190 K). On the Ni surface an increase of Ni+, NiCO+ and Ni2CO+ was measured up to 400 K. The adsorption of CO on CuNi alloy surfaces — as derived from the work function measurements — can be described by the assumption of two different states of adsorbed carbon monoxide. They can be characterized by different binding energies and from sign and magnitude different work function changes. These states were interpreted as adsorption at Ni or Cu sites of the alloy surfaces, respectively. To a certain extent the SIMS results from the alloy surfaces are incompatible with the work function measurements and desorption spectroscopy and the SIMS studies on the pure metals. A Cu+ emission with comparable intensity to the Ni+ emission was found for alloys with bulk concentrations of 60 and 40 at% Cu at 300 K. The ratio Ni+Cu+ was nearly independent of CO pressure and temperature. The measured ratios of Cu+2(Cu+ + Ni+), Ni+2(Cu+ + Ni+) and CuNi+(Cu+ + Ni+) with values about 10?2 can be explained the basis of a statistical arrangement of Cu and Ni atoms in the alloy surface. The intensities of the MCO+ emissions are 102 times smaller than the corresponding values of the pure metals. No emission of M2CO+ was found on CuNi during CO adsorption.  相似文献   

4.
《Surface science》1989,219(3):L576-L582
The scattering of CO+ and CO+2 at grazing incidence from Ni(111)+K and clean Ni(111), Ni(110) surfaces produces CO, CO2 and dissociated species. The observation of negative species O and CO2 is strongly dependent on the K coverage or work function of the surface. The dissociation of CO+ (CO) is weakly changed by the presence of K, whereas in the CO+2 (CO2) case dissociation via CO2 → CO + O is strongly increasing with K coverage.  相似文献   

5.
Electron energy loss spectroscopy (ELS) in the energy range of electronic transitions (primary energy 30 < E0 < 50 eV, resolution ΔE ≈ 0.3 eV) has been used to study the adsorption of CO on polycrystalline surfaces and on the low index faces (100), (110), (111) of Cu at 80 K. Also LEED patterns were investigated and thermal desorption was analyzed by means of the temperature dependence of three losses near 9, 12 and 14 eV characteristic for adsorbed CO. The 12 and 14 eV losses occur on all Cu surfaces in the whole coverage range; they are interpreted in terms of intramolecular transitions of the CO. The 9 eV loss is sensitive to the crystallographic type of Cu surface and to the coverage with CO. The interpretation in terms of d(Cu) → 2π1(CO) charge transfer transitions allows conclusions concerning the adsorption site geometry. The ELS results are consistent with information obtained from LEED. On the (100) surface CO adsorption enhances the intensity of a bulk electronic transition near 4 eV at E0 < 50 eV. This effect is interpreted within the framework of dielectric theory for surface scattering on the basis of the Cu electron energy band scheme.  相似文献   

6.
Selected thermal desorption and valence band photoemission data on the chemisorption of CO on PtCu(111) surfaces are presented. The main objective is to make a comparison with CO chemisorption on an annealed (1 × 3) reconstructed Pt0.98Cu0.02(110) surface. The (111) alloy surfaces are unreconstructed (1 × 1) surfaces, with average near-surface Cu concentrations ranging from ? 7.5% to ? 20% as indicated by the Cu 920 eV Auger signal. It is observed that the effect of alloying Pt(111) with Cu is to progressively lower the desorption peak temperature and hence the free energy of CO desorption from Pt sites. A second observation is that the energy distribution of the Cu 3d-derived states is little affected by CO adsorption on Cu sites at 155 K. Both these results offer a contrast to the results for CO/Pt0.98Cu0.02(110) reported earlier.  相似文献   

7.
《Surface science》1992,271(3):L385-L391
Infrared reflection-absorption spectroscopy (IRAS) has been used to study the adsorption of carbon monoxide on a Cu(100) surface. Adsorption isotherms were determined at CO pressures from 10−6 to 10 Torr, and at temperatures from 115 to 340 K, and the isosteric heats of adsorption (δEads) evaluated as a function of CO coverage. For increasing CO coverages between 0-0.15 monolayers (ML), δEads decreases sharply from 16.7 to 12.7 kcal/mol. From 0.15 to 0.35 ML, δEads remains approximately 12.7 kcal/mol and exhibits little coverage dependence. These results are in excellent agreement with previously reported data for the CO/Cu(100) system acquired at much lower pressures (<10−4 Torr) and temperatures (<275 K). At substrate temperatures above 240 K and at pressures > 10−4, significant bathochromic shifts of the CO frequency to lower wavenumbers are observed.  相似文献   

8.
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   

9.
A study of the adsorption/desorption behavior of CO, H2O, CO2 and H2 on Ni(110)(4 × 5)-C and Ni(110)-graphite was made in order to assess the importance of desorption as a rate-limiting step for the decomposition of formic acid and to identify available reaction channels for the decomposition. The carbide surface adsorbed CO and H2O in amounts comparable to the clean surface, whereas this surface, unlike clean Ni(110), did not appreciably adsorb H2. The binding energy of CO on the carbide was coverage sensitive, decreasing from 21 to 12 kcalmol as the CO coverage approached 1.1 × 1015 molecules cm?2 at 200K. The initial sticking probability and maximum coverage of CO on the carbide surface were close to that observed for clean Ni(110). The amount of H2, CO, CO2 and H2O adsorbed on the graphitized surface was insignificant relative to the clean surface. The kinetics of adsorption/desorption of the states observed are discussed.  相似文献   

10.
The adsorption of CO on Cu(110) has been studied by LEED, surface potentials and infrared spectroscopy. With increasing surface coverage the s.p. passes through a maximum value of 0.29 V and than falls to 0.17 V at saturation. The heat of adsorption is nearly constant (~55 kJ mol?1) up to the maximum s.p. but then falls rapidly. A ( 2× 1) structure is formed near the s.p. maximum, followed by a structure which is compressed in the [11?0] direction and poorly ordered in the [001] direction but tending towards c(1.3 × 2). At low coverage two infrared bands appear at 2088 and 2104 cm?1; their relative intensity is similar at 77, 195 and 295 K. As the coverage increases, the bands shift in frequency and merge into a single band at 2094 cm?1. The origin of the two bands is discussed in relation to the overlayer structure. Strong interaction between CO molecules is shown by the spectra of mixtures of 13CO and 12CO.  相似文献   

11.
《Surface science》1988,194(3):L112-L118
SIMS was used to study the adsorption of potassium on a gold foil, and the interaction of O2 and CO with potassium monolayers and submonolayers. The SIMS K+ signal decreased with increasing coverage of K in a manner which can be attributed to work function changes. Oxygen interacts readily with potassium monolayers and submonolayers. No evidence for the adsorption of CO on chemisorbed potassium was obtained. The results are compared with coadsorption studies on substrates other than gold.  相似文献   

12.
CO adsorption on the (111) face of a Pt10Ni90 alloy single crystal has been investigated at room temperature by vibrational electron energy loss spectroscopy (EELS) and photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS and UPS). Two well separated CO stretching modes develop at 2070 and 1820 ± 10 cm?1, with their intensities reaching 64 and 36% respectively of the total intensity at saturation coverage. They are attributed to CO adspecies in terminal and bridge bonded configuration respectively. The UPS spectra of 4σ, 5σ and 1π molecular orbitais of adsorbed CO show complex features which may be resolved into two components having the main characteristics of CO adsorbed on pure Pt(111) and Ni(111) respectively. Such behaviour is also observed by XPS on C 1s on O 1s peaks. Their respective contributions, in both XPS and UPS spectra are about 64 and 36% of the whole spectrum. Finally compared to Ni(111) — on which CO adsorbs mainly in bridge configuration — the alloying with 10% Pt has generated the appearance of a large number of new sites for CO chemisorption associated with the presence of Pt atoms at the surface. The large amount of terminal CO adspecies is interpreted in terms of considerable surface enrichment of the alloy in platinum.  相似文献   

13.
Reflection absorption infrared spectroscopy has been used in conjunction with LEED and surface potential measurements to study low temperature CO adsorption on the oxidised Cu surfaces Cu(111)O|32?2|, Cu(110)O(2 × 1) and Cu(110)Oc(6 × 2). On all three surfaces adsorption at 80 K yields surface potential changes in excess of 0.6 V and does not lead to the formation of an ordered overlayer. At high coverages the adsorption enthalpy is lower than on the clean surfaces. Infrared spectra show the growth of a doublet band with components initially at 2100 and 2117 cm?1 on the oxidised Cu(111) surface. Similar features seen on the oxidised Cu(110) surfaces are accompanied by a band at 2140 cm?1: a very weak band at the same frequency on oxidised Cu(111) is attributed to defect sites. Studies of the temperature dependence of the spectrum from oxidised Cu(111) lead to the conclusion that two different binding sites are occupied. Spectra of 12CO13CO mixtures show that the molecules occupying these sites are in close proximity to each other, and that the spectrum is subject to large but opposing coverage-dependent frequency shifts.  相似文献   

14.
An accurate determination of the relative uptakes of CO in the formation of three successive overlayer structures on Cu(111) has been achieved by sequential adsorption of 12CO and 13CO followed by isotopic analysis of the desorbing gas. The results identify the intermediate structure as (1.5 × 1.5)?18° at a coverage of 0.44, rather than a slightly distorted c(4 × 2) structure with a coverage of 0.50.  相似文献   

15.
Nuclear microanalysis (NMA) has been used to determine the absolute coverages of oxygen and CO adsorbed on Pt(111). The saturation oxygen coverage at 300 K is 3.9 ± 0.4 × 1014 O atoms cm?2 (θ = 0.26 ± 0.03), confirming the assignment of the LEED pattern as p(2 × 2). The saturation CO coverage at 300 K is 7.4 ± 0.3 × 1014 CO cm?2 (θ = 0.49 ± 0.02). The low temperature saturation CO coverages on Pt(100), (110) and (111) surfaces are compared.  相似文献   

16.
The ion angular distributions resulting from electron stimulated desorption (ESD) of oxygen and carbon monoxide chemisorbed on a tungsten (111) crystal have been determined. The O+ ions released during ESD of adsorbed oxygen exhibit three-fold symmetric angular distributions in orientational registry with the W(111) substrate. The CO+ and O+ ions released during ESD of a monolayer of CO are desorbed normal to the (111) surface. Models for both oxygen and CO adsorption are discussed. The data for CO are consistent with adsorption of CO in “standing up” carbonyl structures in the virgin and α-CO binding states.  相似文献   

17.
The adsorption of ammonia on the Ni(110) and Ni(111) surfaces has been studied with high resolution (≤ 65 cm?1) electron energy loss spectroscopy (EELS) combined with thermal desorption spectroscopy. The EELS spectra of the initial chemisorbed layer or α state on each surface are very different. Ammonia chemisorbed on the Ni(110) surface exhibits a strong Ni-N stretching mode at 570 cm?1 which is absent on the Ni(111) surface. The Ammonia adsorption site appears to be different on the Ni(110) and Ni(111) surfaces. We suggest that the absence of the M-N stretching mode on the Ni(111) surface is a general characteristic of the ammonia adsorption site on the (111) surfaces of fcc Group VIII metals.  相似文献   

18.
For CO adsorption on Fe(100) different adsorption species are detected with high resolution EELS (electron energy loss spectroscopy) which sequentially fill in with increasing coverage. Up to ~ 350 K and low CO exposure (≦1 L), a predominant molecular species with an unusually low stretching frequency, 1180–1245 cm?1, is detected. This unusual CO bond weakening is consistent with a “lying down” binding configuration of CO. For higher CO coverages at 110 K, further CO adsorption states with vibrational frequencies of 1900–2055 cm?1 are populated which are due to CO bound with the molecular axis perpendicular to the surface.  相似文献   

19.
The adsorption and coadsorption of CO and H2 have been studied by means of thermal desorption (TD) and electron stimulated desorption (ESD) at temperatures ranging from 250 to 400 K. Three CO TD states, labelled as β2, β1, and β0 were detected after adsorption at 250 K. The population of β2 and β1 states which are the only ones observed upon adsorption at temperatures higher than 300 K was found to depend on adsorption temperature. The correlation between the binding states in the TD spectra and the ESD O+ and CO+ ions observed was discussed. Hydrogen is dissociatively adsorbed on Pd(111) and no ESD H+ signal was recorded following H2 adsorption on a clean Pd surface. The presence of CO was found to cause an appearance of a H+ ESD signal, a decrease of hydrogen surface population and an arisement of a broad H2 TD peak at about 450 K. An apparent influence of hydrogen on CO adsorption was detected at high hydrogen precoverages alone, leading to a decrease in the CO sticking coefficient and the relative population of CO β2 state. The coadsorption results were interpreted assuming mutual interaction between CO and H at low and medium CO coverages, the “cooperative” species being responsible for the H+ ESD signal. Besides, the presence of CO was proved to favour hydrogen penetration into the bulk even at high CO coverage when H atoms were completely displaced from the surface.  相似文献   

20.
《Surface science》1994,321(3):L249-L254
The characteristics of CO and NO adsorption on surfaces of CuO(110) and Cu2O(110) have been studied by using the self-consistent-charge discrete variational Xa method (SCC-DV-Xa). The calculated results show that the CO and NO molecules are perpendicularly adsorbed on cuprous ions of Cu2O and cupric ions of CuO, respectively and with oxygen pointing upward in both cases. The order of chemisorption energy of the four adsorbed systems is: CuO-NO > Cu2O-CO > Cu2O-NO > CuO-CO. In all chemisorptions discussed d orbitals of Cu do play an important role.  相似文献   

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