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1.
HREELS and SIMS studies of hydrogen isotopc exchange in a coverage obtained on Ir(111) by ethylene adsorption are carried out at 180–450 K and at a hydrogen (deuterium) pressure up to 8×106 Pa. The ethylidyne species have shown a high stability towards hydration and structural changes upon hydrogen (deuterium) exposures. Under these conditions hydrogen exchange in the methyl groups is a slow process. With increasing temperature the hydrogen exchange in the decomposition products of ethylidyne (C2H species) is quick and depends on the exchanged amount of atomically adsorbed hydrogen.  相似文献   

2.
《Surface science》1989,223(3):L927-L936
Hydrocarbon phases from the thermal processing of low temperature adsorption of propene on Rh(111) and those from direct adsorption at particular temperatures were characterized by HREELS and were found to show differences. The phase from direct adsorption at room temperature contains CxH species and ethylidyne which shows a better bond breaking ability than the room temperature phase produced by thermal processing which contains ethylidyne, propylidyne and di-σ adsorbed propene. The use of the phase from direct adsorption at room temperature, especially the low coverage phase, in comparison with similarly prepared phases on Ru(001), Ir(111), Ni(111), Pd(111) and Pt(111) shows a correlation on bond breaking ability that agrees with Sinfelt's correlation of the hydrogenolysis activity of the group 7–10 metals. This suggests that the room temperature phase of an alkene on a surface can be used to predict the hydrogenolysis activity of that surface.  相似文献   

3.
The thermal evolution of acetylene and ethylene and their deuterated counterparts on a palladium (111) surface has been studied by high-resolution electron energy loss spectroscopy in the temperature range 150–500 K. Analysis of the vibrational spectra indicates that chemisorbed acetylene evolves at 300 K in the presence of surface hydrogen to mainly ethylidyne, CCH3, and a small amount of residual acetylene. Spectra obtained with and without preadsorbed hydrogen provide evidence for a 〉C CH2 intermediate in the reaction. Chemisorbed ethylene also evolves to ethylidyne after heating from 150 to 300 K but much of the ethylene desorbs. The high temperature (400–500 K) behavior of C2H2 and C2H4 involves formation of a CH species. Although a small amount of the CH species may be formed from the dehydrogenation of ethylidyne, it is found that carbon-carbon bond scission of acetylene near 400 K is the dominant mechanism in CH formation.  相似文献   

4.
The interaction of CO, O2, H2, N2, C2H4 and C6H6 with an Ir(110) surface has been studied using LEED, Auger electron spectroscopy and flash desorption mass spectroscopy. Adsorption of oxygen at 30°C produces a (1× 2) structure, while a c(2 × 2) structure is formed at 400°C. Two peaks have been detected in the thermal desorption spectrum of oxygen following adsorption at 30°C. The heat of adsorption of hydrogen is slightly higher on Ir(110) than on Ir(111). Adsorption of carbon monoxide at 30°C produces a (2 × 1) surface structure. The main CO desorption peak is found around 230, while two other desorption peaks are observed around 340 and 160°C. At exposures between 250 and 500°C carbon monoxide adsorption yields a c(2 × 2) structure and a desorption peak around 600°C. Carbon monoxide is adsorbed on an Ir(110) surface partly covered with oxygen or carbon in a new binding state with a significantly higher desorption temperature than on the clean surface. Adsorption of nitrogen could not be detected on either clean or on carbon covered Ir(110) surfaces. The hydrocarbon molecules do not form ordered surface structures on Ir(110). The thermal desorption spectra obtained after adsorption of C6H6 or C2H4 are similar to those reported previously for Ir(111) consisting mostly of hydrogen. Heating the (110) surface above 700°C in the presence of C6H6 or C2H4 results in the formation of an ordered carbonaceous overlayer with (1 × 1) structure. The results are compared with those obtained previously on the Ir(111) and Ir(755) or stepped [6(111) × (100)] surfaces. The CO adsorption results are discussed in relation to data on similar surfaces of other Group VIII metals.  相似文献   

5.
《Surface science》1987,182(3):L234-L240
Very high energy ions incident upon a sample with adsorbed light adatoms will cause some of the adsorbates to recoil off the surface with substantial amounts of energy. The number of recoil particles is a direct measure of the adatom concentration. Using this technique (elastic recoil detection analysis or ERDA), we have determined the concentration of adsorbed ethylene (C2H4) and ethylidyne (C2H3) on Pt(111). We find, both for adsorption below and at room temperature, that the coverage is approximately one half of a monolayer, in agreement with earlier work using X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy. We propose that the adsorbed ethylidyne molecules form a honeycomb lattice.  相似文献   

6.
An analysis has been made of on- and off-specular electron energy loss spectra (EELS) from C2H4 and C2D4 adsorbed on a clean Ni(110) and also a carbided Ni(110) surface. The carbided surface was prepared by heating the clean Ni surface in ethylene to 573 K or above. EELS spectra were obtained using a Leybold-Heraeus spectrometer at a beam energy of 3.0 eV and with a resolution of ca. 6.5 meV (ca. 50 cm?1).The loss spectrum from ethylene at low temperatures (110 K) showed principal features at 3000 (w), 1468 (w), 1162 (s), 879 (w) and 403 cm?1 (s) (C2D4 adsorption) and 2186 (w), 1258 (ms), 944 (ms), 645 (w) and 400 cm?1 (s) (C2D4 adsorption). The overall pattern of wavenumbers and intensifies of the C2H4/C2D4 loss peaks is very similar in form (although systematically different in positions) to those previously observed on Ni(111) (ref.1) and Pt(111) (ref.2) surfaces at low temperatures. Like these earlier spectra,the EELS results for C2H4/C2D4 adsorbed on clean Ni(110) can be well interpreted in terms of a MCH2CH2M/MCD2CD2M species (M = metal) with the CC bond parallel to the surface.After adsorption on the carbided Ni(110) surfaces at 125 K,the main loss features occur at 3065 (m), 2992 (m), 1524 (ms), 1250 (s), 895 (s), and 314 cm?1 (vs) (C2H4 adsorption) and 2339 (m), 2242 (m), 1395 (s), 968 (s), 661 (m) and 314 cm?1 (vs). With the exceptions of reduced intensities of the bands at 895 cm?1 (C2H4) and 661 cm?1 (C2D4) this pattern of losses - particularly the 1550-1200 cm?1 features which can be assigned to coupled νCC and δCH2/δCD2 modes - is well related to similar results on Cu(100) (ref.3) and Pd(111) (ref.4) which have been interpreted convincingly in terms of the presence of π-bonded species, (C2H4)M or (C2D4)M on the surface. This structural assignment is supported by comparison with the vibrational spectra of Zeise's salt, K[PtCl3(C2H4)].H2O (refs.5&6).Spectral changes occur on warming C2H4 on the clean Ni(110) surface with a growth of a feature near 895 cm?1 at 200 K. At 300 K a rather poorly-defined spectrum occurs, which differs substantially from those found on (111) surfaces of Pt (ref.2), Rh (ref.7) or Pd (ref.8) at room temperature. These latter have been attributed to the ethylidyne, CH3.CM3, surface species (ref.9). For adsorption on Ni(110) there is clearly a mixture of species at room temperature.The analysis of the vibrational spectra of selected metal-cluster compounds of known structure with selected hydrocarbon ligands has helped substantially to assign the spectra of surface species in terms of bonding structures of the adsorbed species, as in the cases of the identification of (C2H4)M π-adsorbed (refs.5&6) and the ethylidyne CH3.CM3 species (ref.9). We have recently analysed the infrared and Raman spectra of the cluster compound (C2H2)Os3(CO)10 and its deuterium-containing analogue. The infrared frequency and intensity pattern for the A′ modes (CS symmetry) of the two isotopomers bears a remarkable resemblance to EELS spectra previously obtained at low temperature for C2H2/C2D2 adsorbed on Pt(111) (ref.2) and (after taking into account systematic frequency shifts) for Pd(111) (ref.4). There is good evidence for believing that the structure of the hydrocarbon ligand interacting with the osmium complex takes the form
where the arrow denotes a π-bond to the third metal atom. This strongly confirms the structure for the low-temperature acetylene species on Pt(111) as proposed by Ibach and Lehwald (ref.2).Finally the room-temperature spectra for ethylene adsorbed on finely-divided silica-supported Pt and Pd catalysts have previously been interpreted in terms of the presence of MCH2CH2M (ref.10) and π-bonded (C2H4)M species (ref.11). However comparisons with the more recent EELS spectra from ethylene on Pt(111) at room temperature (ref.2) now leads to a reassignment of the 2880 cm?1 band, on Pt, previously assigned to MCH2CH2M, together with a new, related,band at 1340 cm?1 (ref.12), to the ethylidyne species CH3CPt3 found on the single crystal surface.More detailed analyses of the spectra reported here will be published later. Acknowledgement is given to substantial assistance for this programme of research from the Science and Engineering Research Council.  相似文献   

7.
Methylidyne (CH) was prepared on Pt(1 1 1) by three methods: thermal decomposition of diiodomethane (CH2I2), ethylene decomposition at temperatures above 450 K, and surface carbon hydrogenation. Methylidyne and its precursors are characterized by reflection absorption infrared spectroscopy (RAIRS). The C-I bond of diiodomethane breaks upon adsorption to produce methylene (CH2), which decomposes to methylidyne at temperatures above 130 K. Above 200 K, methylidyne is the only hydrocarbon species observed with RAIRS, although reaction channels for the formation of methane (CH4) and ethylene (C2H4) are indicated by temperature programmed desorption (TPD). As is well known from numerous previous studies, ethylene decomposes to ethylidyne (CCH3) upon exposure to Pt(1 1 1) at 410 K. Upon annealing to 450 K, ethylidyne dissociates through two reaction pathways, dehydrogenation to ethynyl (CCH) and C-C bond scission to methylidyne. Ethylene dehydrogenation on the surface at 750 K and under low ethylene exposures produces surface carbon that can be hydrogenated to methylidyne with C-H and C-D stretch frequencies of 2956 and 2206 cm−1, respectively. Hydrogen co-adsorption on the surface causes these frequencies to shift to higher values. Methylidyne is stable on Pt(1 1 1) to temperatures up to 500 K.  相似文献   

8.
The chemisorption of C2H2 and C2H4 on a clean or partly C- or O-covered Fe(111) surface was investigated with AES, TDS and HREELS. On the clean surface, both molecules adsorb under strong rehybridization close to sp3. Above 230 K, C2H2 reacts to form CH and presumably CH2 as the main products, which on further heating decompose to yield H2 desorption maxima at 580 and 490 K, leaving two carbon species on the surface which correspond to two loss peaks at 400 and 1290 cm?1 in the HREELS spectrum. C2H4 undergoes very rapid decomposition above 250 K; no intermediates have been detected. The presence of coadsorbed oxygen or carbon atoms only reduced the maximum uptake of C2H2, but led to the appearance of new molecular adsorption states of C2H4 and inhibited C2H4 decomposition.  相似文献   

9.
High resolution electron energy loss spectroscopy (HREELS) and low energy electron diffraction (LEED) have been used to study the structure of adsorbed benzene (C6H6 and C6D6) monolayers on the Rh(111) surface at 300K. A surface bonding geometry is proposed for benzene adsorbed to give a c(2?3×4) rectangular structure, which involves very little perturbation of the molecular structure with the ring plane parallel to the surface. Only one chemical environment for adsorbed benzene is indicated by a single frequency shift of the symmetric CH out-of-plane bending mode. The adsorption site is tentatively assigned to benzene centered over a single Rh atom.  相似文献   

10.
The structure of the Rh(111)-(2 × 2)-C2H3 overlayer that was obtained upon the adsorption of ethylene has been determined using a LEED intensity analysis. In agreement with a prior HREELS study, an ethylidyne (CCH3) species is found to stand perpendicularly above an hcp hollow site with a carbon-carbon distance of 1.45±0.10 Å and a metal-carbon distance of 2.03±0.07 Å. The Zanazzi-Jona and Pendry R-factors for this structure are 0.49 and 0.52, respectively. By comparison with similar organometallic complexes, the relatively short carbon-carbon distance and long metal-carbon distance can be explained by σ?π hyperconjugation of the surface ethylidyne fragment.  相似文献   

11.
《Surface science》1986,177(2):417-430
The interactions of ethylene oxide (EtO) with the Ag(110) and Pt(111) surfaces have been studied using XPS, TDS, AES and EELS. On Ag(110), the interaction is very weak, with only molecular desorption observable. The heat of adsorption is ≈ 10.1 kcal mole−1. In contrast, decomposition reactions strongly predominate on Pt(111) at low coverage. Molecular desorption is only seen at high coverages. The heat of adsorption decreases from > 11.9 to 10 kcal mole−1 with increasing coverage. Condensed multilayers desorb at ≈ 140 K. Ultimate decomposition products on Pt(111) include H2 and CO gas, and carbon residue on the surface. Evidence suggests that adsorbed decomposition intermediates may include atomic hydrogen, CO, acetyl and ethylidyne species, with at least one other, yet unidentified, species. These results imply that, if produced, adsorbed ethylene oxide would be unlikely to escape a reactor containing Pt catalyst without further decomposition reactions. This may help explain the uniqueness of Ag catalysts in ethylene epoxidation.  相似文献   

12.
《Surface science》1986,175(1):L687-L692
Adsorbed CN may be produced on Pd(111) and Pd(100) surfaces at RT by dissociative adsorption of cyanogen. HREELS measurements show that adsorbed CN forms adsorbed HCN or DCN on these Pd surfaces by reaction with H adsorbed from the residual gas or by dosing with H2 or D2. The reaction temperature is slighly lower for Pd(100) than for Pd(111), and the range of temperatures over which the reaction takes place much narrower. The reaction occurs on a time scale easily monitored with HREELS.  相似文献   

13.
Ultraviolet photoemission spectroscopy using hv = 21.2 eV and filtered 40.8 eV radiation as well as temperature programmed thermal desorption spectroscopy are used to investigate the chemical reaction of acetylene with Ni(100) and Ni(110) surfaces at room temperature. Striking crystallographic effects and several coexisting phases are observed and found to be coverage and temperature dependent. A methodology is described and used to predict the relative energy levels for a variety of adsorbed hydrocarbon fragments on Ni surfaces. Such levels together with the thermal desorption spectra are used to identify the observed species. In particular, CH and CCH species are isolated on Ni(100) and Ni(110) surfaces, respectively, via low temperature adsorption and subsequent pulsed sample warming experiments. The room temperature adsorption phases are deduced using these ionization levels together with those of chemisorbcd acetylene, atomic hydrogen and carbon. At room temperature on Ni(100), H, C, CH and C2H2 species form together below 2 L exposure while CH species form thereafter, up to a saturation exposure of ~10 L. On Ni(110), H and CCH species form below 1.5 L exposure followed by the formation of CH2 and likely CH species. The relative stabilities of these species at elevated temperatures is: C2H2 < CCH ? CH < CH2. A model for the bonding of acetylene and its reaction to form CCH species on Ni(110) is proposed.  相似文献   

14.
The adsorption of CO, O2, and H2O was studied on both the (111) and [6(111) × (100)] crystal faces of iridium. The techniques used were LEED, AES, and thermal desorption. Marked differences were found in surface structures and heats of adsorption on these crystal faces. Oxygen is adsorbed in a single bonding state on the (111) face. On the stepped iridium surface an additional bonding state with a higher heat of adsorption was detected which can be attributed to oxygen adsorbed at steps. On both (111) and stepped iridium crystal faces the adsorption of oxygen at room temperature produced a (2 × 1) surface structure. Two surface structures were found for CO adsorbed on Ir(111); a (√3 × √3)R30° at an exposure of 1.5–2.5 L and a (2√3 × 2√3)R30° at higher coverage. No indication for ordering of adsorbed CO was found on the Ir(S)-[6(111) × (100)] surface. No significant differences in thermal desorption spectra of CO were found on these two faces. H2O is not adsorbed at 300 K on either iridium crystal face. The reaction of CO with O2 was studied on Ir(111) and the results are discussed. The influence of steps on the adsorption behaviour of CO and O2 on iridium and the correlation with the results found previously on the same platinum crystal faces are discussed.  相似文献   

15.
《Surface science》1991,248(3):L279-L284
The UV photochemistry of both monolayer and multilayer C6H5Cl adsorbed on Ag{111} surfaces has been studied using high resolution electron energy loss spectroscopy (HREELS). Photon-induced dissociation via the cleavage of the CCl bonds was observed as a common feature. For the monolayer, chemisorbed biphenyl appears to be formed on the surface after photolysis at 110 K and subsequent annealing to 300 K. The two phenyl rings are found to lie parallel to the metal surface. The photon-induced dissociation of multilayer C6H5Cl leads, however, to photopolymerization as shown by the high thermal stability of the surface species formed and the detection of simple additive products in thermal desorption.  相似文献   

16.
The thermal evolution of acetylene and ethylene on a palladium (111) surface has been studied by high-resolution electron energy loss spectroscopy in the temperature range 150K–500K. Formation of ethylidyne ( CCH3) near room temperature is important for both molecules, whereas CH is the major surfaces hydrocarbon species formed at high temperatures.  相似文献   

17.
The coadsorption of formic acid and water on Au(111) surfaces has been investigated by means of vibrational and photoelectron spectroscopy (HREELS, XPS). Formic acid adsorbs at 90 K molecularly with vibrational modes characteristic for flat lying zig-zag chains in the mono- and multilayer regime, like in solid formic acid. Annealing results in a complete desorption at 190 K. Sequential adsorption of formic acid and water at 90 K shows no significant chemical interaction. Upon annealing the coadsorbed layer to 140 K a hydrogen-bonded cyclic complex of formic acid with one water molecule could be identified using isotopically labelled adsorbates (D2O, H13COOD). Upon further annealing this complex decomposes leaving molecularly adsorbed formic acid on the surface at 160 K, accompanied by a proton exchange between formic acid and water. PACS 68.08.-p; 68.43.-h; 68.43.Pq  相似文献   

18.
本文利用阻抗谱研究Ir(111)电极在HClO4和H2SO4中溶液中的氢吸附行为. 在HClO4溶液中,随着施加电位从0.2 V降到0.1 V(vs RHE),Ir(111)电极上氢吸附速率从1.74×10-8 mol·cm-2·s-1增大到 3.47×10-7 mol·cm-2·s-1 . 与相同条件下Pt(111)电极上的氢吸附速率相比,Ir(111)上的氢吸附速率要小1∽2个数量级,这是由于Ir(111)电极与H2O结合能力更强,因此位于水合氢键网络中的氢离子需要克服更高的能垒才能重新定向进而发生欠电位沉积. 在H2SO4溶液中,氢吸附电位负移了200 mV,吸附速率也下降了一个数量级,这是由于Ir(111)电极表面强吸附的硫酸根/硫酸氢根物种的阻碍作用. 结果表明,在电化学环境下,位于电极表面附近的水分子的取代和重新定向在很大程度上影响了氢吸附过程.  相似文献   

19.
The adsorption of H2O on clean and K-covered Pt(111) was investigated by utilizing Auger, X-ray and ultra-violet photoemission spectroscopies. The adsorption on Pt(111) at 100–150 K was purely molecular (ice formation) in agreement with previous work. No dissociation of this adsorbed H2O was noted on heating to higher temperatures. On the other hand, adsorption of H2O on Pt(111) + K leads to dissociation and to the formation of OH species which were characterized by a work function increase, an O 1s binding energy of 530.9 eV and UPS peaks at 4.7 and 8.7 eV below the Fermi level. The amount of OH formed was proportional to the K coverage for θK > 0.06 whereas no OH could be detected for θ? 0.06. Dissociation of H2O occurred already at T = 100 K, with a sequential appearance of O 1s peaks at 531 and 533 eV representing OH and adsorbed H2O, respectively. At room temperature and above only the OH species was observed. Annealing of the surface covered with coadsorbed K/OH indicated the high stability of this OH species which could be detected spectroscopically up to 570 K. The adsorption energy of H2O coadsorbed with K and OH on Pt(111) is increased relative to that of H2O on Pt. The work function due to this adsorbed H2O increases whereas it decreases for H2O on Pt(111). The energy shifts of valence and O1s core levels of H2O on Pt + K as deduced from a comparison of gas phase and adsorbate spectra are 2.8–4.2 eV compared to ≈ 1.3–2.3 eV for H2O on Pt (111). This increased relaxation energy shift suggests a charge transfer screening process for H2O on Pt + K possibly involving the unoccupied 4a1 orbital of H2O. The occurrence of this mode of screening would be consistent with the higher adsorption energy of H2O on Pt + K and with its high propensity to dissociate into OH and H.  相似文献   

20.
The adsorption of ethylene-oxide (Et-O) on Ni(111) was studied with high resolution electron energy loss spectroscopy and angular resolved UV-light induced photoelectron spectroscopy (ARUPS) at 140K; these measurements were complemented by thermal desorption spectroscopy (TDS) and workfunction change measurements ( δφ ).For fractional Et-O monolayer coverages five loss peaks were observed with HREELS at 835, 1155, 1270, 1495 and 3150 cm−1 which are attributed to the C2O ring deformation, CH2 wagging and twisting modes, to the C2O ring breathing, to the CH2 scissor modes and C-H stretching modes of molecular adsorbed Et-O. At low coverage, the HREELS is dominated by the 835 and 3150 cm−1 losses, whereas the 1155, 1270 and 1495 cm−1show only weak intensities. The latter loss peaks increase significantly in intensity for Et-O coverage near the saturation of the first adsorption layer, θ (Et-O)~0.3.UPS measurements confirm the molecular adsorption of Et-O on Ni(111) at 140 K. Compared to the Et-O gas phase UPS, a considerable shift to lower binding energy is observed for the 6a1 oxygen lone pair orbital and also for the 2b1 (n, σCO, σCC) which has some lone pair character. These chemical shifts suggest a bonding of Et-O to Ni(111) through the oxygen atom.  相似文献   

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