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Decomposition of carbon monoxide on a (110) nickel surface
Authors:HH Madden  G Ertl
Institution:Department of Physics, Wayne State University, Detroit, Michigan 48202, U.S.A.;Institut für Physikalische Chemie, Technische Universität, Hannover, Germany
Abstract:New investigations of the (110) nickel/carbon monoxide system have been made using low energy electron diffraction (LEED), Auger electron spectroscopy (AES), mass spectroscopy and work function measurements. Room temperature adsorption of CO on the surface was reversible with the CO easily removable by heating in vacuum to 450°K. The CO formed a double-spaced structure on the surface which, however, was unstable at room temperature for CO pressures less than 1×10?7 torr. Work function changes greater than + 1.3 eV accompany this reversible CO adsorption. Irreversible processes leading to the build-up of carbon, and under certain circumstances oxygen, on the surface were the primary concern of the measurements reported here. These processes could be stimulated by the electron beams used in LEED and AES, or by heating the clean surface in CO. The results of AES investigations of this carbon (and oxygen) build-up, together with CO desorption results could be explained on the basis of two surface reactions. The primary reaction was the dissociation of chemisorbed CO leaving carbon and oxygen atomically dispersed on the surface. The second reaction was the reduction of the surface oxygen by CO from the gas phase. The significance of the dissociation reaction to COdesorption studies is discussed.
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