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1.
The adsorption and reaction of methyl nitrite (CH3ONO, CD3ONO) on Pt(111) was studied using HREELS, UPS, TPD, AES, and LEED. Adsorption of methyl nitrite on Pt(111) at 105 K forms a chemisorbed monolayer with a coverage of 0.25 ML, a physisorbed second layer with the same coverage that desorbs at 134 K, and a condensed multilayer that desorbs at 117 K. The Pt(111) surface is very reactive towards chemisorbed methyl nitrite; adsorption in the monolayer is completely irreversible. CH3ONO dissociates to form NO and an intermediate which subsequently decomposes to yield CO and H2 at low coverages and methanol for CH3ONO coverages above one-half monolayer. We propose that a methoxy intermediate is formed. At least some C–O bond breaking occurs during decomposition to leave carbon on the surface after TPD. UPS and HREELS show that some methyl nitrite decomposition occurs below 110 K and all of the methyl nitrite in the monolayer is decomposed by 165 K. Intermediates from methyl nitrite decomposition are also relatively unstable on the Pt(111) surface since coadsorbed NO, CO and H are formed below 225 K.  相似文献   

2.
Chen Xu  Bruce E. Koel   《Surface science》1994,310(1-3):198-208
The adsorption of NO on Pt(111), and the (2 × 2)Sn/Pt(111) and (√3 × √3)R30°Sn/Pt(111) surface alloys has been studied using LEED, TPD and HREELS. NO adsorption produces a (2 × 2) LEED pattern on Pt(111) and a (2√3 × 2√3)R30° LEED pattern on the (2 × 2)Sn/Pt(111) surface. The initial sticking coefficient of NO on the (2 × 2)Sn/Pt(111) surface alloy at 100 K is the same as that on Pt(111), S0 = 0.9, while the initial sticking coefficient of NO on the (√3 × √3)R30°Sn/Pt(111) surface decreases to 0.6. The presence of Sn in the surface layer of Pt(111) strongly reduces the binding energy of NO in contrast to the minor effect it has on CO. The binding energy of β-state NO is reduced by 8–10 kcal/mol on the Sn/Pt(111) surface alloys compared to Pt(111). HREELS data for saturation NO coverage on both surface alloys show two vibrational frequencies at 285 and 478 cm−1 in the low frequency range and only one N-O stretching frequency at 1698 cm−1. We assign this NO species as atop, bent-bonded NO. At small NO coverage, a species with a loss at 1455 cm−1 was also observed on the (2 × 2)Sn/ Pt(111) surface alloy, similar to that observed on the Pt(111) surface. However, the atop, bent-bonded NO is the only species observed on the (√3 × √3)R30°Sn/Pt(111) surface alloy at any NO coverage studied.  相似文献   

3.
The adsorption and reaction of methylacetylene (H3CC≡CH) on Pt(111) and the p(2×2) and

surface alloys were investigated with temperature programmed desorption, Auger electron spectroscopy and low energy electron diffraction. Hydrogenation of methylacetylene to form propylene is the most favored reaction pathway on all three surfaces accounting for ca 20% of the adsorbed monolayer. Addition of Sn to the Pt(111) surface to form these two ordered surface alloys suppresses the decomposition of methylacetylene to surface carbon. The alloy surfaces also greatly increase the amount of reversibly adsorbed methylacetylene, from none on Pt(111) to 60% of the adsorbed layer on the

surface alloy. Methylacetylene reaction also leads to a small amount of desorption of benzene, along with butane, butene, isobutylene and ethylene. There is some difference in the yield of these other reaction products depending the Sn concentration, with the (2×2)-Sn/Pt(111) surface alloy having the highest selectivity for these. Despite previous experiments showing cyclotrimerization of acetylene to form benzene on the Pt–Sn surface alloys, the analogous reaction of methylacetylene on the alloy surfaces was not observed, that is, cyclotrimerization of methylacetylene to form trimethylbenzene. It is proposed that this and the high yield of propylene is due to facile dehydrogenation of methylacetylene because of the relatively weak H–CH2CCH bond compared to acetylene. The desorption of several C4 hydrocarbon products at low (<170 K) temperature indicates that some minor pathway involving C–C bond breaking is possible on these surfaces.  相似文献   

4.
The chemistry of methyl species resulting from the decomposition of dimethylmercury (DMM) and dimethylzinc (DMZ) on Pt(111) in the range 300–400 K has been investigated by temperature prograrnmed desorption (TPD) and Auger electron spectroscopy (AES). In each case at 300 K, dissociative adsorption of the precursor results in the formation of an adlayer of methylmetal (CH3M) moieties. These species are thermally stable to around 350 K before decomposing to yield mainly gaseous products, methane and hydrogen, and surface bound metal atoms. For DMM, subsequent heating to 400 K or direct dissociative adsorption at 400 K results in the formation of ethylidyne species. Ethylidyne formation is not observed in the thermal chemistry of DMZ at temperatures below 400 K and only transiently in the chemistry at 400 K. Complementary TPD and AES data indicate that, for DMM, desorption of the mercury atoms produced by CH3Hg decomposition is the limiting factor in allowing the prevailing C1 species to couple to form ethylidyne. In contrast, AES evidence indicates that zinc atoms remain on the surface to temperatures in excess of 750 K and hence prevent C---C coupling by blocking surface sites.  相似文献   

5.
N. Saliba  D. H. Parker  B. E. Koel   《Surface science》1998,410(2-3):270-282
Atomic oxygen coverages of up to 1.2 ML may be cleanly adsorbed on the Au(111) surface by exposure to O3 at 300 K. We have studied the adsorbed oxygen layer by AES, XPS, HREELS, LEED, work function measurements and TPD. A plot of the O(519 eV)/Au(239 eV) AES ratio versus coverage is nearly linear, but a small change in slope occurs at ΘO=0.9 ML. LEED observations show no ordered superlattice for the oxygen overlayer for any coverage studied. One-dimensional ordering of the adlayer occurs at low coverages, and disordering of the substrate occurs at higher coverages. Adsorption of 1.0 ML of oxygen on Au(111) increases the work function by +0.80 eV, indicating electron transfer from the Au substrate into an oxygen adlayer. The O(1s) peak in XPS has a binding energy of 530.1 eV, showing only a small (0.3 eV) shift to a higher binding energy with increasing oxygen coverage. No shift was detected for the Au 4f7/2 peak due to adsorption. All oxygen is removed by thermal desorption of O2 to leave a clean Au(111) surface after heating to 600 K. TPD spectra initially show an O2 desorption peak at 520 K at low ΘO, and the peak shifts to higher temperatures for increasing oxygen coverages up to ΘO=0.22 ML. Above this coverage, the peak shifts very slightly to higher temperatures, resulting in a peak at 550 K at ΘO=1.2 ML. Analysis of the TPD data indicates that the desorption of O2 from Au(111) can be described by first-order kinetics with an activation energy for O2 desorption of 30 kcal mol−1 near saturation coverage. We estimate a value for the Au–O bond dissociation energy D(Au–O) to be 56 kcal mol−1.  相似文献   

6.
A detailed study of the interaction of hydrogen and carbon monoxide with two different Rh(1 1 1)/V surface alloys (1/3 monolayer of V in the second atomic layer or 1/3 monolayer of V in form of islands on the surface) is presented in comparison to the clean Rh(1 1 1) surface. For hydrogen a decrease in the sticking coefficient is found for both alloy surfaces. The sticking coefficient of H2 as a function of the translational energy is similar to the Rh(1 1 1) surface, showing a direct activated adsorption mechanism. For low translational energies hydrogen adsorption is dominated by dynamical steering on Rh(1 1 1) and by a precursor mechanism on the Rh(1 1 1)/V subsurface alloy. The H2 TPD desorption peaks are shifted to lower temperatures on the alloy surfaces, caused by the downshift of the metal d-band due to V alloying. On all three surfaces the saturation coverage of hydrogen was measured, giving 1.2, 1.0 and 0.8 monolayer for Rh(1 1 1), the Rh(1 1 1)/V subsurface alloy and for the Rh(1 1 1)/V islands, respectively. For CO the sticking coefficients and the saturation coverages are basically the same on the Rh(1 1 1) and the alloy surfaces. There is an extrinsic precursor on the ordered CO (√3×√3) phase on the Rh(1 1 1) surface, but there is no evidence for such a precursor on the Rh(1 1 1)/V subsurface alloy. On the Rh(1 1 1)/V islands surface, the extrinsic precursor exists on the Rh(1 1 1) surface between the V islands. Apparently this precursor is only stable on the ordered CO layer on Rh(1 1 1).  相似文献   

7.
A. Kis  K. C. Smith  J. Kiss  F. Solymosi   《Surface science》2000,460(1-3):190-202
The adsorption and dissociation of CH2I2 were studied at 110 K with the aim of generating CH2 species on the Ru(001) surface. The methods used included X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS), ultraviolet photoelectron spectroscopy (UPS), temperature programmed desorption (TPD), Auger electron spectroscopy (AES) and work function measurements. Adsorption of CH2I2 is characterized by a work function decrease (0.96 eV at monolayer), indicating that adsorbed CH2I2 has a positive outward dipole moment. Three adsorption states were distinguished: a multilayer (Tp=200 K), a weakly bonded state (Tp=220 K) and an irreversibly adsorbed state. A new feature is the formation of CH3I, which desorbs with Tp=160 K. The adsorption of CH2I2 at 110 K is dissociative at submonolayer, but molecular at higher coverages. Dissociation of the monolayer to CH2 and I proceeded at 198–230 K, as indicated by a shift in the I(3d5/2) binding energy from 620.6 eV to 619.9 eV. A fraction of adsorbed CH2 is self-hydrogenated into CH4 (Tp=220 K), and another one is coupled to di-σ-bonded ethylene, which — instead of desorption — is converted to ethylidyne at 220–300 K. Illumination of the adsorbed CH2I2 initiated the dissociation of CH2I2 monolayer even at 110 K, and affected the reaction pathways of CH2.  相似文献   

8.
J.M. Essen  K. Wandelt 《Surface science》2007,601(16):3472-3480
The adsorption of ethene (C2H4) on Pt(1 1 1) and the Pt3Sn/Pt(1 1 1) and Pt2Sn/Pt(1 1 1) surface alloys has been investigated experimentally by high-resolution electron energy loss spectroscopy and temperature programmed desorption. The experimental results have been compared with density functional theory (DFT) calculations allowing us to perform a complete assignment of all vibration modes and loss features to the species present on the surfaces. On Pt(1 1 1) as well as on the Pt-Sn surface alloys an η2 di-σ-bonded conformation of ethene has been found to be the most stable adsorbed form. In addition to this majority species a minor amount of π-bonded ethene has been identified, which is more abundant on the Pt2Sn surface alloy than on the other surfaces. Additionally the HREELS spectra of ethene on Pt(1 1 1) and the Pt-Sn surface alloys differ only slightly in terms of the energetic positions of the loss peaks.  相似文献   

9.
Haibo Zhao 《Surface science》2004,573(3):413-425
Adsorption and desorption of trans-decahydronaphthalene (C10H18) and bicyclohexane (C12H22) can be used to probe important aspects of non-specific dehydrogenation leading to surface carbon accumulation and establish better estimates of activation energies for C-H bond cleavage at Pt-Sn alloys. This chemistry was studied on Pt(1 1 1) and the (2 × 2)-Sn/Pt(1 1 1) and (√3 × √3)R30°-Sn/Pt(1 1 1) surface alloys by using temperature programmed desorption (TPD) mass spectroscopy and Auger electron spectroscopy (AES). These hydrocarbons are reactive on Pt(1 1 1) surfaces and fully dehydrogenate at low coverages to produce H2 and surface carbon during TPD. At monolayer coverage, 87% of adsorbed C10H18 and 75% C12H22 on Pt(1 1 1) desorb with activation energies of 70 and 75 kJ/mol, respectively. Decomposition of C10H18 is totally inhibited during TPD on these Sn/Pt(1 1 1) alloys and decomposition of C12H22 is reduced to 10% of the monolayer coverage on the (2 × 2)-Sn/Pt(1 1 1) alloy and totally inhibited on the (√3 × √3)R30°-Sn/Pt(1 1 1) alloy. C10H18 and C12H22 are more weakly chemsorbed on these two alloys compared to Pt(1 1 1) and these molecules desorb in narrow peaks characteristic of each surface with activation energies of 65 and 73 kJ/mol on the (2 × 2) alloy and 60 and 70 kJ/mol on the (√3 × √3)R30°-Sn/Pt(1 1 1) alloy, respectively. Alloyed Sn has little influence on the monolayer saturation coverage of these two molecules, and this is decreased only slightly on these two Sn/Pt(1 1 1) alloys. The use of these two probe molecules enables an improved estimate of the activation energy barriers E* to break aliphatic C-H bonds in alkanes on Sn/Pt alloys; E* = 65-73 kJ/mol on the (2 × 2)-Sn/Pt(1 1 1) alloy and E* ? 70 kJ/mol on the (√3 × √3)R30°-Sn/Pt(1 1 1) alloy.  相似文献   

10.
The adsorption of CO on Pt(1 1 1), (2 × 2) and (√3 × √3)R30° Sn/Pt(1 1 1) surface alloys has been studied using temperature programmed desorption (TPD), low energy electron diffraction (LEED) and infrared reflection adsorption spectroscopy (IRAS). The presence of Sn in the surface layer of Pt(1 1 1) reduces the binding energy of CO by a few kcal/mol. IRAS data show two C-O stretching frequencies, ∼2100 and ∼1860 cm−1, corresponding to atop and bridge bonded species, respectively. Bridge bonded stretching frequencies are only observed for Pt(1 1 1) and (2 × 2) Sn/Pt(1 1 1) alloy surfaces. A slight coverage dependence of the vibrational frequencies is observed for the three surfaces. High pressure IRAS experiments over a broad temperature range show no indication of bridge bonded CO on any of the three surfaces. Direct CO adsorption on Sn sites is not observed over the measured temperature and pressure ranges.  相似文献   

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