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1.
The molecular chemisorption of N2 on the reconstructed Ir(110)-(1 × 2) surface has been studied with thermal desorption mass spectrometry, XPS, UPS, AES, LEED and the co-adsorption of N2 with hydrogen. Photoelectron spectroscopy shows molecular levels of N2 at 8.0 (5σ + 1π) and 11.8 (4σ) eV in the valence band and at 399.2 eV with a satellite at 404.2 eV in the N(1s) region, where the binding energies are referenced to the Ir Fermi level. The kinetics of adsorption and desorption show that both precursor kinetics and interadsorbate interactions are important for this chemisorption system. Adsorption occurs with a constant probability of adsorption of unity up to saturation coverage (4.8 × 1014 cm?2), and the thermal desorption spectra give rise to two peaks. The activation energy for desorption varies between 8.5 and 6.0 kcal mole?1 at low and high coverages, respectively. Results of the co-adsorption of N2 and hydrogen indicate that adsorbed N2 resides in the missing-row troughs on the reconstructed surface. Nitrogen is displaced by hydrogen, and the most tightly bound state of hydrogen blocks virtually all N2 adsorption. A p1g1(2 × 2) LEED pattern is associated with a saturated overlayer of adsorbed N2 on Ir(110)-(1 × 2).  相似文献   

2.
Previous results for 12C16O chemisorbed on a Pt“111” recrystallised ribbon revealed that the infrared absorption band due to the CO stretch appears at low coverages at 2063 cm?1 and shifts to ~2100 cm?1 at saturation coverage at 300 K. The cause of this shift is studied in the present work, by investigating the vibrational spectra from a variety of mixtures of 12C16O and 12C16O. The results show that there is a strong dipole-dipole coupling interaction between adsorbate molecules in the overlayer, and provide conclusive evidence that the 35 cm?1 frequency shift observed with increasing coverage for 12C16O is attributable to coupling.  相似文献   

3.
The adsorbate induced (1×2) (1×1) (2×1)p1g1 phase transitions on Pt(110) have been studied by Rutherford backscattering (RBS), nuclear microanalysis (NMA), LEED and thermal desorption spectroscopy. RBS data indicate that any displacement of the surface atoms from their expected bulk-like lattice sites in the (1×2) phase is ? 0.002 nm laterally and ? 0.007 nm vertically. This contraint eliminates models for the reconstruction which involve significant lateral displacements (e.g., the paired-atom or hexagonal overlayer models). The RBS data are consistent with both the rumpled model with up/down displacements not exceeding ~0.007 nm and the missing row model with an unrelaxed surface in which the out-of-plane vibrational amplitude is slightly enhanced. A c(8×4) phase, produced by CO (or NO) exposure at T?250 K, has also been characterized by RBS which demonstrated that 0.92×1015 Pt cm?2 move on average by ~0.017 nm laterally out-of-registry with the bulk upon formation of this phase. The values of the saturation adsorbate coverages at T?200K were determined by NMA to be 0.92 ± 0.05×1015, 1.0 ± 0.06×1015 and 1.07 ± 0.10×1015 CO molecules, NO molecules and D atoms, respectively, per cm2. The value of the saturation coverage by CO (θ = 1.0) supports recent models of the (2×1)p1g1 overlayer. The isosteric heat of adsorption of CO is 160 ± 15 kJ mol?1 in the range 0.2?θ?0.5.  相似文献   

4.
The adsorption and desorption of nitrogen on a platinum filament have been studied by thermal desorption techniques. Nitrogen adsorption becomes significant only after any carbon contamination is removed from the surface by heating the platinum filament in oxygen, and after the CO content in the background gas is reduced substantially. At room temperature nitrogen populates an atomic tightly bound β-state, E = 19 kcal mole?1. The saturation coverage of the (3-state is 4.5 × 1014 atoms cm?2. Formation of the (β-state is a zero order process in the pressure range studied. At 90 K two additional α1- and α2-desorption peaks are observed. The activation energy for desorption for the α2-state is 7.4 kcal mole?1 at low coverage decreasing to 3 kcal mole?1 at saturation of this state, 6 × 10 molecules cm?2. The maximum total coverage in the α-states was 1.2 × 1015 molecules cm?2. A replacement process between the β- and α-states has been observed where each atom in the (β-state excludes two molecules from the α-state.  相似文献   

5.
The chemisorption and subsequent reaction of bromine on Cr(110 has been studied by Auger spectroscopy, LEED, Δφ, and thermal desorption measurements. For gas doses of < 7.5 × 1018 molecules m?2, very efficient dissociative chemisorption leads to a series of well-ordered, out-of-registry compression structures. Uniquely, however, the overlayer falls back into registry at saturation coverage; at this point the appearance of glide symmetry indicates that the three-fold coordinated adsorption sites are occupied exclusively. Brominemetal charge transfer occurs during adsorption (in contrast to Cr(100)). On raising the temperature at low coverages, the surface phase decomposes by evaporation as CrBr molecules; at higher coverages the desorption product switches to CrBr2. Continuous growth of bulk CrBr2 sets in at high gas exposures, this corrosion reaction proceeding at a rate which is ten times slower than the rate of overlayer formation. The chromium dibromide layer also evaporates as CrBr2(g). Structural relationships with related metal-halogen systems are discussed.  相似文献   

6.
The adsorption of 12CO on Ir films evaporated under ultrahigh vacuum (UHV) conditions was studied using infrared reflection-absorption spectroscopy (IRAS). Only a single absorption band was observed at 300 K, shifting continuously from the “singleton” value ~2010 cm?1 at very low coverages to 2093 cm?1 at saturation coverage. This band is attributed to CO adsorbed on top of the surface atoms. Synchronously with this shift the bandwidth at half maximum intensity Δv12 decreases from ~30 to 8 cm?1. The integrated peak area increases linearly with coverage up to a relative coverage (θr) of approximately 0.4, then the increase levels off and a maximum is observed. Upon continuing adsorption the intensity decreases slightly. In addition results are presented on adsorption at 300 K of 12CO?13CO isotopic mixtures. The coverage induced frequency shift is discussed in terms of a dipole-dipole coupling mechanism and it is concluded that intermolecular coupling can explain the shift (~83 cm?1) observed. The decrease in intensity at coverages > 0.4 is attributed to the formation of a compressed overlayer with part of the CO molecules adsorbed in a multicentre position with different spectral properties. No infrared bands of nitrogen adsorbed at 78 K could be detected at pressures up to 6.7 kPa (1 Pa = 0.0075 Torr, 1 Torr = 133.32 Pa).  相似文献   

7.
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   

8.
Oxygen adsorbed on Pt(111) has been studied by means of temperature programmed thermal desorption spectroscopy (TPDS). high resolution electron energy loss spectroscopy (EELS) and LEED. At about 100 K oxygen is found to be adsorbed in a molecular form with the axis of the molecule parallel to the surface as a peroxo-like species, that is, the OO bond order is about 1. At saturation coverage (θmol= 0.44) a (32×32)R15° diffraction pattern is observed. The sticking probability S at 100 K as a function of coverage passes through a maximum at θ = 0.11 with S = 0.68. The shape of the coverage dependence is characteristic for adsorption in islands. Two coexisting types of adsorbed oxygen molecules with different OO stretching vibrations are distinguished. At higher coverages units with v-OO = 875 cm?1 are dominant. With decreasing oxygen coverages the concentration of a type with v-OO = 700 cm?1 is increased. The dissociation energy of the OO bond in the speices with v-OO = 875 cm?1 is estimated from the frequency shift of the first overtone to be ~ 0.5 eV. When the sample is annealed oxygen partially desorbs at ~ 160K, partially dissociates and orders into a p(2×2) overlayer. Below saturation coverage of molecular oxygen, dissociation takes place already at92 K. Atomically adsorbed oxygen occupies threefold hollow sites, with a fundamental stretching frequency of 480 cm?1. In the non-fundamental spectrum of atomic oxygen the overtone of the E-type vibration is observed, which is “dipole forbidden” as a fundamental in EELS.  相似文献   

9.
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   

10.
High-resolution vibrational electron energy-loss spectra of CO on an Ni(110) surface were studied at 300 K with the in-situ combination of LEED, Auger electron spectroscopy and work-function change measurement. The observed peaks are at 436 cm?1, 1855 cm?1 (shifting to 1944 cm?1 with increasing coverage) and at 1960 cm?1 (shifting to 2016 cm?1 with increasing coverage). The experimental results indicate that CO is adsorbed non-dissociatively at all coverages. Three adsorbed states of CO have been found. At fractional CO coverages less than θ ~ 0.9 where the disordered adsorbed structure dominates, CO is adsorbed in two inequivalent sites (short- and long-bridge sites) at random with its axis oriented perpendicular to the surface. At high coverages (θ > 0.9) where the (2 × 1) structure develops, our results indicate that the adsorbed CO molecules may occupy the distorted long-bridge sites forming zig-zag chains which lie essentially in the troughs of the (110) surface.  相似文献   

11.
Differential and integral molar entropies of the adsorbed layer are calculated from the dependence of the coverage on pressure and temperature published in part I. The experimental entropies correspond up to coverages of 2 × 1014 molecules cm?2 with entropies of the localized adsorption and an additional vibration entropy of about 20 cal deg?1 mole?1 caused by vibrations of the adsorbed atoms in the order of magnitude of 1012 sec?1. At higher coverages the entropy increases and passes through a maximum. This is explained by the formation of a second adsorption state (γ state) probably consisting of molecular hydrogen.  相似文献   

12.
Cesium adsorption on oxygenated and oxidized W(110) is studied by Auger electron spectroscopy, LEED, thermal desorption and work function measurements. For oxygen coverages up to 1.5 × 1015 cm?2 (oxygenated surface), preadsorbed oxygen lowers the cesiated work function minimum, the lowest (~1 eV) being obtained on a two-dimensional oxide structure with 1.4 × 1015 oxygen atoms per cm2. Thermal desorption spectra of neutral cesium show that the oxygen adlayer increases the cesium desorption energy in the limit of small cesium coverages, by the same amount as it increases the substrate work function. Cesium adsorption destroys the p(2 × 1) and p(2 × 2) oxygen structures, but the 2D-oxide structure is left nearly unchanged. Beyond 1.5 × 1015 cm?2 (oxidized surface), the work function minimum rises very rapidly with the oxygen coverage, as tungsten oxides begin to form. On bulk tungsten oxide layers, cesium appears to diffuse into the oxide, possibly forming a cesium tungsten bronze, characterized by a new desorption state. The thermal stability of the 2D-oxide structure on W(110) and the facetting of less dense tungsten planes suggest a way to achieve stable low work functions of interest in thermionic energy conversion applications.  相似文献   

13.
The adsorption of acetylene on W(100) at room temperature has been studied by AES, ELS, thermal desorption, mass spectrometry, work function and LEED in one vacuum chamber. AES line profile analysis shows that there are at least two adsorption processes occurring at room temperature. Further, it is possible to explain all the AES results by assuming non-sequential adsorption into just two states, denoted by α and β. This picture was substantiated and embellished by comparison with other standard surface techniques. The α-state comprises either a C2H2 unit with an activation energy for desorption of 2.3 eVmolecule (53 kcal mole?1) or CH units bounded through the carbon of the β-state. Saturation coverage for the α-state is 3 × 1014 molecules cm?2. The β-state is dissociative at low acetylene exposures and comparison between a carbon covered surface and the β-state suggest the latter to be dissociative up to saturation. There also appears to be ca. 1014 hydrogen atoms cm?2 on W(100) on room temperature acetylene saturation, the carbon content of the β-state being 9 × 1014 atoms cm?2. The residual C?C bond from the molecule in the β-state remains unknown. No sign of ordering in the adsorbed species was detected, save the possibility of (1 × 1) in the β-state. Acetylene adsorption at 580 K showed hydrogen from the β-state to block acetylene adsorption by 15% at saturation. A two-site adsorption model for the β-state is proposed to explain the results. The α-state is bonded through the carbon of the β-state and it is speculated that the former adsorbs onto “β” domains where there is a critical minimum size for the latter.  相似文献   

14.
The adsorption of CO on Rh(111) has been studied by thermal desorption mass spectrometry and low-energy electron diffraction (LEED). At temperatures below 180 K, CO adsorbs via a mobile precursor mechanism with sticking coefficient near unity. The activation energy for first-order CO desorption is 31.6 kcal/mole (νd = 1013.6s?1) in the limit of zero coverage.As CO coverage increases, a (√3 ×√3)R30u overlayer is produced and then destroyed with subsequent formation of an overlayer yielding a (2 × 2) LEED pattern in the full coverage limit. These LEED observations allow the absolute assignment of the full CO coverage as 0.75 CO molecules per surface Rh atom. The limiting LEED behavior suggests that at full CO coverage two CO binding states are present together.  相似文献   

15.
GaP(001) cleaned by argon-ion bombardment and annealed at 500°C showed the Ga-stabilized GaP(001)(4 × 2) structure. Only treatment in 10?5 Torr PH3 at 500°C gave the P-stabilized GaP(001)(1 × 2) structure. The AES peak ratio PGa is 2 for the (4 × 2) and 3.5 for the (1 × 2) structure. Cs adsorbs with a sticking probability of unity up to 5 × 1014 Cs atoms cm?2 and a lower one at higher coverages. The photoemission measured with uv light of 3660 Å showed a maximum at the coverage of 5 × 1014 atoms cm?2. Cs adsorbs amorphously at room temperature, but heat treatment gives ordered structures, which are thought to be reconstructed GaP(001) structures induced by Cs. The LEED patterns showed the GaP(001)(1 × 2) Cs structure formed at 180°C for 10 h with a Cs coverage of 5 × 1014 atoms cm?2, the GaP(001)(1 × 4) Cs formed at 210°C for 10 hours with a Cs coverage of 2.7 × 1014 atoms cm?2, the GaP(001)(7 × 1) and the high temperature GaP(001)(1 × 4), the latter two with very low Cs content. Desorption measurements show three stability regions: (a) between 25–150°C for coverages greater than 5 × 1014 atoms cm?2, and an activation energy of 1.2 eV; (b) between 180–200°C with a coverage of 5 × 1014 atoms cm?2, and an activation energy of 1.8 eV; (c) between 210–400°C with a coverage of 2.7 × 1014 atoms cm?2, and an activation energy of 2.5 eV.  相似文献   

16.
Thermal desorption and work function measurements indicate that a largely molecular layer, with some dissociation, is formed at 80–100 K, with an increase in work function of 0.55 eV. The coverage in this layer is 11.5 × 1014 molecules/cm2, or CO/W = 1.15. On heating, equal amounts of a β precursor, possibly dissociated, and a molecular α species are formed at ≈300 K, with abundances of 5 × 1014 molecules/cm2 each. The α desorption is complete at 360 K. The β precursor evolves on heating without desorption in the range 400–700 K as indicated by work function decreases, to β-CO, which is almost certainly dissociated. This change occurs at lower temperatures for low coverages. Thermal desorption shows 3 peaks, which have been traditionally labelled β1, β2, and β3 at 930, 1070, and 1375 K. Of these only β3 corresponds to a well defined state. Readsorption after heating to 950 or 1150 K results in a doubly peaked spectrum at 1070 and 1375 K. The β1 and β2 peaks obey complex desorption kinetics, probably corresponding to desorption and rearrangement. The coverage of β3 is 2.5 × 1014 molecules/cm2, suggesting that the c(2 × 2) LEED pattern corresponds to occupany of every other unit cell by a C or an O atom. For coverages ? 1.5 × 1014 molecules/cm2 β3 desorption obeys second order kinetics with an activation energy of 83 ± 3 kcal/mole. For β3 the work function decreases from the clean W value by 0.1 eV, suggesting adsorption of C and O in the center of the W unit mesh, below the surface layer of W atoms. Readsorption on β and β precursor layers leads to formation of electropositive α-CO, with a multiply peaked thermal desorption spectrum, indicating the existence of different binding sites. Adsorption-heatingreadsorption, -heating-readsorption sequences indicate that additional changes in the α desorption spectrum occur, suggesting reconstruction in the β layer.  相似文献   

17.
S.B. Lee  M. Weiss  G. Ertl 《Surface science》1981,108(2):357-367
Adsorption of K on Fe(110), (100) and (111) surfaces was studied by means of LEED, AES, thermal desorption and work function measurements. The monolayer capacity is about 5.5 × 1014 K-atoms/cm2 in all three cases. With Fe(111) an ordered 3 × 3 overlayer was found at fairly low coverages. The work function decreases to a minimum and the initial dipole moments were determined to μ0 = 7.0 Debye for Fe(110), μ0 = 4.4 Debye for K/Fe(100) and μ0 = 3.9 Debye for K/Fe(111). The heat of adsorption decreases from its initial value (Fe(110): 57; Fe(100): 54; Fe(111): 52 kcal/mole) continuously with increasing coverage which parallels the continuous decrease of the dipole moment of the adsorbate complex.  相似文献   

18.
The surface structures formed on room temperature adsorption of chlorine on W(100) and subsequent annealing of the saturated surface have been characterised by LEED. The progress of gas adsorption was followed by AES which was also used to observe relative chlorine coverage on annealing. Room temperature adsorption was random up to the saturation exposure of 1.7 L. On annealing the chlorine adlayer ordering commenced at about 800 K. One-dimensional ordering into rows along the <1, 1> directions was followed by the ordering of these into two 2D structures: an interpenetrating 7111 at 830 K and an interpenetrating 5161 for 860 K and above. Desorption started after 1050 K annealing and was complete by 1440 K. Saturation chlorine coverage is inferred as 5 × 1014 atoms cm?2 and the single desorption peak coupled with the LEED analysis suggests that chlorine is bridge bonded to the W(100) surface for the ordered overlayer.  相似文献   

19.
High resolution electron energy loss spectroscopy (EELS), thermal desorption mass spectrometry (TDMS) and low energy electron diffraction (LEED) have been used to investigate the molecular chemisorption of N2 on Ru(001) at 75 K and 95 K. Adsorption at 95 K produces a single chemisorbed state, and, at saturation, a (√3x√3) R30° LEED pattern is observed. Adsorption at 75 K produces an additional chemisorbed state of lower binding energy, and the probability of adsorption increases by a factor of two from its zero coverage value when the second chemisorbed state begins to populate. EEL spectra recorded for all coverages at 75 K show only two dipolar modes — ν(RuN2) at 280–300 cm?1 and ν(NN) at 2200–2250 cm?1 — indicating adsorption at on-top sites with the axis of the molecular standing perpendicular to the surface. The intensities of these loss features increase and ν(NN) decreases with increasing surface coverage of both chemisorbed states.  相似文献   

20.
The influence of surface defects on the adsorption of CO by rhenium is investigated using LEED, AES and linear temperature programmed desorption. On both surfaces, thermal desorption reveals two adsorption states, the lower temperature α state being resolved into two substates, and one β state, all desorbing with first order kinetics. The α state is unaffected by the surface texture, its maximum population being the same on both surfaces, around 4 × 1014 molecules cm?2, similar to the value found for poly crystalline rhenium. On the other hand, the β state is strongly dependent on surface structure. On Re(0001) a maximum of 4 × 1013 molecules cm?2 was found, and 2 × 1014 molecules cm?2 on the stepped surface. The adsorption is activated and can be increased, by heating to 550 K, to 2 × 1014 molecules cm?2 on the basal plane and 3.5 × 1014 molecules cm?2 on the stepped surface. Ordered structures are now seen in LEED. Comparison of these results with previous results from polycrystalline rhenium indicate that the dissociation of β-CO on the latter surface must occur at defects other than steps.  相似文献   

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