The chemistry of C2 perfluoroalkyl iodide on the Cu(1 1 1) single crystal surface |
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Authors: | Deyi Lu Chao-Ming Chiang Xiaonian Li |
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Affiliation: | a Resource and Environment Catalysis Institute, State Key Laboratory Breeding Base of Green-Chemical Synthesis Technology, Zhejiang University of Technology, Hangzhou 310032, China b Department of Chemistry Center for Nanoscience and Nanotechnology, National Sun Yat-Sen University, Kaoshiung 80424, Taiwan, ROC c National Synchrotron Radiation Research Center, Hsinchu 30077, Taiwan, ROC |
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Abstract: | The thermal chemistry of perfluoroethyl iodide (C2F5I) adsorbed on Cu(1 1 1) has been investigated by temperature-programmed reaction/desorption (TPR/D), reflection-absorption infrared spectroscopy (RAIRS), and X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS). I 4d and F 1s XPS spectra show that dissociative adsorption of C2F5I to form the surface-bound perfluroethyl (Cu-C2F5) moieties occurs at very low temperature (T < 90 K), while the C-F bond cleavage in adsorbed perfluroethyl (Cu-C2F5) begins at ca. 300 K. XPS and TPR/D studies further reveal that the reactions of βCF3αCF2(ad) on Cu(1 1 1) are strongly dependent on the surface coverage. At high coverages (?0.16 L exposure), the adsorbed perfluroethyl (Cu-C2F5) evolves, via α-F elimination, into the surface-bound tetrafluoroethylidene moieties (Cu CF-CF3) followed by a dimerization step to form octafluoro-2-butene (CF3CF CFCF3) at 315 K as gas product. The surface-bound (Cu-C2F5) decomposes preferentially, at low coverages (?0.04 L), via consecutive α-F abstraction to afford intermediate, trifluoroethylidyne (Cu CCF3), resulting in the final coupling reaction to yield hexafluoro-2-butyne (CF3C CCF3) at 425 K. However, at middle coverages (ca. 0.08-0.16 L exposure), the adsorbed perfluroethyl (Cu-C2F5) first experiences an α-F elimination and then prefers to loss the second F from β position to yield the intermediate of Cu-CF2-CF Cu (μ-η,η-perfluorovinyl), which may further evolve into hexafluorocyclobutene (CF2CFCFCF2) at 350 K through cyclodimerization reaction. Our results have also shown that the surface reactions to yield the products, CF3CF CFCF3 and CF3C CCF3, obey first-order kinetics, whereas the formation of CF2CFCFCF2 follows second-order kinetics. |
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Keywords: | Copper Single crystal surfaces Halides Surface chemical reaction Thermal desorption spectroscopy X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy |
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