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1.
CO/W desorption spectra are characterized by an α state and multiple β states; using electron stimulated desorption (ESD) the α state was shown to comprise two sub-states, α1 and α2. In this paper the consecutive interactions of O2 and CO on W are investigated using ESD, flash desorption and field emission microscopy (FEM).Desorption spectra show that the α-CO state is displaced by O2, in two stages. The ESD probe provides an identification of the first stage with the removal of the α1-CO state, and energy analysis of ESD ions reveals a large energy shift (~ ? 1.5 eV) during O2 coadsorption which can be attributed to an incresae in the α1-CO WC bond length of ~ 0.15 Å. During this O2-induced displacement, the two β peaks converge into a single peak at the β1 position; this is ascribed to adatom interactions in the mixed O and C adlayer. Isotope exchange experiments with 28CO and 36O2 reveal (i) no exchange in the α-CO states, and (ii) complete exchange in the β-CO states, which is consistent with dissociative adsorption in the latter. The amount of coadsorbed O2 is estimated from these results, and from FEM data: a full monolayer of O adatoms can be coadsorbed on CO-saturated W, but CO pre-adsorption inhibits the formation of W oxides. The β1-O2 (ESD active) state also forms on the CO-covered surface: this state is identical in population, ESD cross section and ion energy distribution to β1-O2 on clean W, and retains its identity in the mixed layer (it does not undergo isotopic exchange). CO2 desorption spectra from the mixed layer were also characterised, complete isotopic scrambling being observed.Pre-exposure of tungsten to O2 inhibits CO adsorption: a monolayer of O2 is sufficient to prevent CO adsorption, and at low O2 coverages, every O2 molecule preadsorbed prevents one CO molecule from adsorbing. Isotopic exchange is again complete in the β states, and a lateral interaction model for desorption kinetics, based on dissociative adsorption in the β-CO state, quantitatively describes the CO desorption spectra.  相似文献   

2.
The ion angular distributions resulting from electron stimulated desorption (ESD) of oxygen and carbon monoxide chemisorbed on a tungsten (111) crystal have been determined. The O+ ions released during ESD of adsorbed oxygen exhibit three-fold symmetric angular distributions in orientational registry with the W(111) substrate. The CO+ and O+ ions released during ESD of a monolayer of CO are desorbed normal to the (111) surface. Models for both oxygen and CO adsorption are discussed. The data for CO are consistent with adsorption of CO in “standing up” carbonyl structures in the virgin and α-CO binding states.  相似文献   

3.
The chemisorption of both CO and O2 on a clean tungsten ribbon has been studied using an ultrahigh vacuum X-ray photoelectron spectrometer. For CO, the energy and intensity of photoemission from O(1s) and C(1s) core levels have been studied for various adsorption temperatures.At adsorption temperatures of ~100 K., the “virgin”-CO state was the dominant adsorbed species. Conversion of this state to more strongly-bound β-CO is observed upon heating the adsorbed layer to ~320K. Thermal desorption of CO at 300?T?640 K causes sequential loss of α1-CO and α2-CO as judged by the disappearance of O(1s) and C(1s) photoelectron peaks characteristic of these states.Oxygen adsorption at 300K gives a single main O(ls) peak at all coverages, although at high oxygen coverages there exist small auxiliary peaks at ~2eV lower kinetic energy. The photoelectron C(1s) and O(1s) binding energies observed for these adsorbed species are all lower than for gaseous molecules containing C and O atoms. For CO adsorption states there is a systematic decrease in photoelectron binding energy as the strength of adsorption increases. These observations are in general accord with expectations based on electronic relaxation effects in condensed materials.  相似文献   

4.
The adsorption and coadsorption of CO and H2 have been studied by means of thermal desorption (TD) and electron stimulated desorption (ESD) at temperatures ranging from 250 to 400 K. Three CO TD states, labelled as β2, β1, and β0 were detected after adsorption at 250 K. The population of β2 and β1 states which are the only ones observed upon adsorption at temperatures higher than 300 K was found to depend on adsorption temperature. The correlation between the binding states in the TD spectra and the ESD O+ and CO+ ions observed was discussed. Hydrogen is dissociatively adsorbed on Pd(111) and no ESD H+ signal was recorded following H2 adsorption on a clean Pd surface. The presence of CO was found to cause an appearance of a H+ ESD signal, a decrease of hydrogen surface population and an arisement of a broad H2 TD peak at about 450 K. An apparent influence of hydrogen on CO adsorption was detected at high hydrogen precoverages alone, leading to a decrease in the CO sticking coefficient and the relative population of CO β2 state. The coadsorption results were interpreted assuming mutual interaction between CO and H at low and medium CO coverages, the “cooperative” species being responsible for the H+ ESD signal. Besides, the presence of CO was proved to favour hydrogen penetration into the bulk even at high CO coverage when H atoms were completely displaced from the surface.  相似文献   

5.
Photoelectron spectra (hv = 21.22 eV) and thermal desorption data were obtained for CO and H coadsorbed on W(100) at 80 K. When the clean surface is exposed to a saturation dose of H2, subsequent exposure to CO results in the formation of a state whose emission spectrum is similar to that of molecular α-CO. Upon heating to ~280 K, a structural rearrangement occurs in which most of the adsorbed CO is converted to the strongly bound β form as the hydrogen is simultaneously desorbed. These data plus the observation that H2 cannot be adsorbed to any significant degree on a saturated layer of β-CO suggest that adsorbed β-CO and H occupy the same atomic sites on the W(100) surface. The distinction between long and short range repulsive COH interactions is discussed. For CO adsorbed on clean W(100), the range of activation energies for vigin to β conversion is calculated from the UPS data to be 45–62 kJ/mol.  相似文献   

6.
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   

7.
鲍世宁  朱立  徐亚伯 《物理学报》1991,40(11):1888-1892
在不同K覆盖度的W(100)面上吸附CO的Hel紫外光电子能谱研究表明:α和β态的CO由于K的影响,吸附状态发生改变,与CO分子态(α态)有关的5σ/1π分子轨道能级随K覆盖度的增加,结合能位置从8.6eV移到9.3eV,反映K出现后,衬底对α-CO分子反施的增强。在与CO分解态(β态)有关的谱峰位置上(结合能为5.5eV)出现两个离散的谱峰,一个在6.0eV左右,另一个在5.2eV左右。其中结合能在5.2eV左右的谱峰强度随K的覆盖度增加而增大,它的能量位置与O在K覆盖的W(100)面上吸附时的能级位置 关键词:  相似文献   

8.
The infrared spectrum of chemisorbed α-CO on polycrystalline tungsten has been studied using ultrahigh vacuum techniques. The α-CO state has been spectroscopically resolved into two states, designated α1-CO (wavenumber ~2128 cm?1) and α2-CO (wavenumber ~2090 cm?1). α2-CO adsorbs predominantly in the first stages of α-CO adsorption; α1-CO forms primarily at high α-CO coverages at the partial expense of α2-CO. α1-CO is found to desorb at a slightly lower temperature than α2-CO. Both α-CO states are postulated to involve sp-hybridized carbon which is bonded to the tungsten surface. These states have previously been detected in electron impact desorption measurements, where α1-CO was shown to liberate CO+ and α2-CO to liberate O+.  相似文献   

9.
The electron impact behavior of CO adsorbed on was investigated. The desorption products observed were neutral CO, CO+, and O+. After massive electron impact residual carbon, C/W = 0.15, but not oxygen was also found, suggesting that energetic neutral O, not detected in a mass analyzer must also have been formed. Formation of β-CO, i.e., dissociated CO with C and O on the surface was not seen. The total disappearance cross section varies only slightly with coverage, ranging from 9 × 10 −18 cm2 at low to 5 × 10−18 cm2 at saturation (CO/W = 0.75). The cross section for CO+ formation varies from 4 × 10−22 cm2 at satura to 2 × 10−21 cm2 at low coverage. That for O+ formation is 1.4 × 10−22 cm2 at saturation and 2 × 10−21 cm2 Threshold energies are similar to those found previously [J.C. Lin and R. Gomer, Surf. Sci. 218 (1989) 406] for and CO/Cu1/W(110) which suggests similar mechanisms for product formation, with the exception of β-CO on clean W(110). It is argued that the absence or presence of β-CO in ESD hinges on its formation or absence in thermal desorption, since electron impact is likely to present the surface with vibrationally and rotationally activated CO in all cases; β-CO formation only occurs on surfaces which can dissociate such CO. It was also found that ESD of CO led to a work function increase of the remaining Pd1/W(110) surface of 500 meV, which could be annealed out only at 900 K. This is attributed to surface roughness, caused by recoil momentum of energetic desorbing entities.  相似文献   

10.
The interaction of 2500 eV electrons with carbon monoxide chemisorbed on tungsten {100} was investigated by rapid-scan Auger electron spectroscopy. When no α state was present the O and C signals from the β state of CO were invariant during electron bombardment, giving an upper limit estimate for the electron stimulated desorption cross section, Qβ of 2 × 10?21 cm2. With the crystal at room temperature and saturated with CO, however, electron-beam induced accumulation of carbon was observed and characterised, the rate of the process being independent of CO pressure at pressures above 2 × 10?8 Torr. At 450 K the rate was found to be pressure dependent up to at least 6 × 10?7 Torr. A model is proposed for the accumulation process, which is based on electron beam dissociation of α2-CO to form adsorbed carbon and gaseous O and the creation of new sites for further α2-CO adsorption; it is in quantitative agreement with the results and yields a cross section for ESD of α2-CO (Qα2 = 1.55×10?18cm2) in close agreement with direct measurements.  相似文献   

11.
Measurements of both the absolute sticking probability near normal incidence and the coverage of H2 adsorbed on W(100) at ~ 300K have been made using a precision gas dosing system; a known fraction of the molecules entering the vacuum chamber struck the sample crystal before reaching a mass spectrometer detector. The initial sticking probability S0 for H2/W(100) is 0.51 ± 0.03; the hydrogen coverage extrapolated to S = 0 is 2.0 × 1015 atoms cm?2. The initial sticking probability S0 for D2/W(100) is 0.57 ± 0.03; the isotope effect for sticking probability is smaller than previously reported. Electron stimulated desorption (ESD) studies reveal that the low coverage β2 hydrogen state on W(100) yields H+ ions upon bombardment by 100 eV electrons; the ion desorption cross section is ~ 1.8 × 10?23 cm2. The H+ ion cross section at saturation hydrogen coverage when the β1 state is fully populated is ? 10?25 cm2. An isotope effect in electron stimulated desorption of H+ and D+ has been found. The H+ ion yield is ? 100 × greater than the D+ ion yield, in agreement with theory.  相似文献   

12.
Thermal desorption and photoemission spectroscopy (PES) have been used to investigate the chemisorption of CO on an annealed Pt0.98Cu0.02(110) surface. The clean surface shows 9.1 ± 2.6% Cu within the top 4 Å, and is (1 × 3) reconstructed. Thermal desorption of CO has revealed the existence of various adsorption states with these respective heats of adsorption: (α) 35.2 to 37.8 kcal/mol and (β) 24.5 to 26.3 kcal/mol on Pt sites, (γ) 16.0 to 17.2 kcal/mol on PtCu “mixed” sited, and (δ) 12.9 to 13.9 kcal/mol on Cu sites. PES observation of Cu 3d-derived states (using hv = 150 eV) and the Cu 2p32 core levels (using Mg Kα radiation) shows that the electronic structure of the Cu constituent is changed only when CO adsorbs on the Pt-Cu “mixed” sites or the Cu sites. Furthermore, the CO states associated with Pt sites reflect the structural difference between the (1 × 3) alloy surface and the (1 × 2) pure Pt(110) surface: α-CO on the alloy surface desorbs at a temperature 17 to 21 K. higher than the maximum desorption temperature of CO from pure Pt(110), and the ratio of β-CO to α-CO desorption from the alloy surface is larger than the ratio of low temperature to high temperature peaks in the desorption of CO from pure Pt(110).  相似文献   

13.
14.
The adsorption of oxygen on a polycrystalline tungsten surface at ~300 K has been studied by means of electron stimulated desorption (ESD) Although precision gas dosing was not employed, the initial sticking probability for dissociative adsorption appears to be essentially unity, while the variation with coverage suggests that a high degree of order exists and that precursor state kinetics are significant. A most noticeable and reproducible discontinuity in ESD parameters occurs at a fractional coverage θ ~ 0.8 (exposure ~ 1.4 × 1015moleculescm2 incident) which is interpreted as an order-disorder transition within a single (β1) chemisorption state, and results in an increase in the ionic desorption cross-section by a factor of ~ 1.26. A discussion of the adsorption kinetics and the disorder transition is given in terms of current models of dissociative adsorption which include the effects of nearest neighbour lateral interactions.  相似文献   

15.
M. Juel  S. Raaen 《哲学杂志》2013,93(21):2475-2486

Adsorption and desorption of carbon monoxide (CO) from Mo(110) have been investigated by temperature programmed desorption (TPD). The TPD spectra exhibit peaks in two temperature regions: 250-400 and 850-1100 K. The first region correspond to adsorption in molecular form, whereas the latter region corresponds to desorption of CO that has been dissociatively adsorbed. When the surface was saturated by CO, about 35% of the desorption intensity originates from the high-temperature region (recombinative desorption) and the remaining desorption signal is from the low-temperature region (molecular adsorption). Desorption parameters for molecular adsorbed CO were obtained using several different heating rates. Desorption energies were estimated to range from 0.9 eV for low coverages of CO to about 0.65 eV for high coverages. Corresponding prefactors were estimated to be in the range from 1 21011 to 1 2109 sm 1. The experimental data have been compared with Monte Carlo simulations of first-order TPD from a bcc (110) lattice, in which partial poisoning of adsorption sites by dissociated carbon and oxygen was modelled. Repulsive near-neighbour interactions were used.  相似文献   

16.
Electron stimulated desorption of O? ions has been demonstrated from the CO/W system. Ion yields are shown to be approximately a factor of 50 smaller for O? than for O+. The O? species is shown to originate from both α-CO adsorption states with an estimated 80% of the O? signal coming from the CO+ producing α-state. Preliminary results indicate that the ion energy distribution for O? is broader and peaks at a higher energy than for the O+ ions.  相似文献   

17.
High resolution electron-energy-loss spectroscopy has been used to study the surface vibrations of CO on a W(100) surface at 300 K. For small exposures (β-CO) two losses at ~68 meV and ~78 meV are observed. This vibrational spectrum of β-CO is a clear indication of dissociative adsorption with the carbon and oxygen atoms in fourfold coordination sites each. With further exposure to CO two additional losses at 45 meV and 258 meV are observed, which represent the vibration of undissociated α-CO in upright position on top of a W atom. Furtheron results of coadsorption of H2/CO and O2/CO on W(100) are reported.  相似文献   

18.
Electron stimulated desorption (ESD) of CO on Ru (001) leads to emission of CO+ and O+ ions from the same adsorption states. Following earlier work on this system, a correlated study of its ESD behaviour together with LEED, Δϕ, and TPD measurments has been carried out. The filling of the two states found earlier can be seen in ESD also. The dividing line between the high and low energy states is different in room temperature adsorption on the one hand, and desorption or equilibrium measurements at elevated temperatures on the other, which is explained by incomplete attainment of equilibrium in the layer under the first condition. The behaviour of the ESD ion currents with coverage showstthat part of the molecules occupying high energy sites in the ordered layer of intermediate coverage are shifted to less favourable sites at higher coverage, so that the full layer consists of a mixture of states due to the occupation of different sites in the compressed layer, possibly accompanied by lateral interactions. ESD also suggests that the high energy sites are the on-top sites rather than the threefold sites.  相似文献   

19.
Adsorption of CO on W(110) at 100 K produces a number of ordered LEED patterns as coverage increases, culminating in a p(5 × 1) pattern for a full virgin CO layer. The beta-1 layer obtained by heating a virgin layer to 400 K has a p(2 × 1) structure. Absolute coverages, obtained by comparison of XPS intensities (and Auger intensities where feasible) with those of oxygen on tungsten at O/W = 0.5 indicate that CO/W ? 0.8 for the full virgin layer and ? 0.3 for beta-1. These results, together with the LEED data, indicate that low temperature adsorption of virgin CO is not very site specific, and that beta-1 must be dissociated with C and O lying along alternate closepacked rows of W. XPS results for the oxygen 1s peak show that the latter shifts in beta and beta-1 from its position in virgin CO to an energy equal to that seen for pure oxygen on tungsten. A number of electron impact desorption results are also presented, and the nature of the various binding states of CO on this plane is discussed.  相似文献   

20.
At 300 K oxygen chemisorbs on Ag(331) with a low sticking probability, and the surface eventually facets to form a (110)?(2 × 1) O structure with ΔΦ = +0.7 eV. This facetting is completely reversible upon O2 desorption at ~570 K. The electron impact properties of the adlayer, together with the LEED and desorption data, suggest that the transition from the (110) facetted surface to the (331) surface occurs at an oxygen coverage of about two-thirds the saturation value. Chemisorbed oxygen reacts rapidly with gaseous CO at 300 K, the reaction probability per impinging CO molecule being ~0.1. At 300 K chlorine adsorbs via a mobile precursor state and with a sticking probability of unity. The surface saturates to form a (6 × 1) structure with ΔΦ = +1.6 eV. This is interpreted in terms of a buckled close-packed layer of Cl atoms whose interatomic spacing is similar to those for Cl overlayers on Ag(111) and Ag(100). Desorption occurs exclusively as Cl atoms with Ed ~ 213 kJ mol?1; a comparison of the Auger, ΔΦ, and desorption data suggests that the Cl adlayer undergoes significant depolarisation at high coverages. The interaction of chlorine with the oxygen predosed surface, and the converse oxygen-chlorine reaction are examined.  相似文献   

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