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1.
The addition of nitrous oxide to a stream of deuterium passing over a rhenium filament reduced the initial sticking probability of the latter gas from 0.24 to 0.09 when the proportion of N2O exceeded 40%. For the addition of deuterium to nitrous oxide the equivalent figures were 0.45 and 0.30 when deuterium exceeded 30% of the gas phase. These results are attributed to a competition between the two gases for places in the precursor state on the surface. The replacement of adsorbed deuterium from a saturated layer by the oxygen atom of nitrous oxide proceeded initially with a high probability, 0.27, at room temperature and with each oxygen atom replacing one deuterium atom. However, the reaction was incomplete, about 2 × 1014 atoms cm?2 of deuterium remaining on the surface. It is suggested that kinetic rather than thermodynamic factors are responsible for the incomplete reaction, possibly as the result of a high activation energy for the migration of deuterium atoms over an oxygenated rhenium surface.  相似文献   

2.
The adsorption of oxygen on Ag(111) has been studied by ellipsometry in conjunction with AES and LEED. The oxygen pressure varied between 10?5 and 10?3 Torr and the crystal temperature between room temperature and 250° C. Changes in the Auger spectrum and the LEED pattern upon oxygen adsorption are very small. Oxygen coverages were derived from the changes in the ellipsometric parameter Δ. At room temperature a maximum coverage is reached within a few minutes. Its value increases with the damage produced by the preceding argon ion bombardment. The sticking coefficient derived from the initial rate of Δ-change amounts to 3 × 10?5 for well-annealed surfaces and 2.5 ? 5 × 10?4 for damaged surfaces. After evacuation no desorption takes place. Other types of adsorption, associated with much larger changes in Δ, were observed upon bombardment with oxygen ions and with oxygen activated by a hot filament. The reaction of CO with adsorbed oxygen was studied ellipsometrically at room temperature in the CO pressure range 10?7–10?6 Torr. The initial reaction rate is proportional to the CO pressure. The reaction probability (number of oxygen atoms removed per incident CO molecule) is 0.36.  相似文献   

3.
LEED and AES have been used to study the structural changes and kinetics of the initial interaction between Fe(001) and oxygen at room temperature. The AES oxygen signal was quantified by using a two-dimensional oxide layer as a calibration point. This reproducible oxide layer was prepared by the high temperature reaction of H2O at 10?6 torr with Fe(001). The initial oxygen sticking coefficient was observed to be close to unity, which suggests that the chemisorption is non-activated and involves a mobile adsorption step. The rate of chemisorption decreased as (1-Θ) and exhibited a minimum at Θ = 0.5. LEED data indicate that the minimum value of the sticking coefficient corresponded to the completion of a c (2 × 2) surface structure. Upon additional exposure to oxygen, an increase in the sticking coefficient was observed in conjunction with the disappearance of the c (2 × 2) and a gradual fade out of all diffraction features. After mild heating, epitaxial FeO (001) and FeO (111) structures were observed. The simultaneous appearance of a shifted M2,3M4,5M4,5 iron Auger transition with the increase in the sticking coefficient and the disappearance of the c (2 × 2) indicated that oxide nucleated on the surface after the complete formation of the c (2 × 2) structure. The relatively high sticking coefficient during the initial oxidation indicates that formation of a mobile adsorbed oxygen state precedes the formation of oxide.  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 non-dissociative and the dissociative adsorption of nitrous oxide and the adsorption of oxygen on silver have been studied by field-emission microscopy using whiskers and epitaxial layers on tungsten tips and volumetrically, with the aid of ultraclean thin films. At 77 K non-dissociative adsorption of nitrous oxide takes place, leading to a decrease in work function. At 273–473 K slow face-specific dissociative adsorption of nitrous oxide occurs, which causes an increase in work function and proceeds with an activation energy at low coverages of 29 ± 5 kJ mol?1. The adsorption of oxygen in this temperature range is more than 104 times faster and for low coverages work function-oxygen exposure plots yield an activation energy of 16 ± 3 kJ mol?1. The coverages reached above 1 Pa are constant and occur in the ratio 1:2:3.5 at 296, 373 and 473 K, the corresponding increases in work function being approximately 0.4, 0.6 and 0.8 eV. The oxygen adsorbed at low temperatures (≈ 273 K) is bound more loosely than that adsorbed at higher temperatures, which is shown by the partial desorption upon evacuation to low pressures (10?8 Pa) at 273 K and application of high electric fields (5 V/nm). The adsorbate formed in the presence of oxygen at 273 K can further be distinguished from the adsorbates formed in the presence of nitrous oxide at 273 K and oxygen at 473 K (both probably O=ads) by the higher reactivity towards hydrogen reduction and the easier thermal desorption, indicating that at 273 K molecular adsorption (O?2, ads) occurs.  相似文献   

6.
The adsorption/desorption characteristics of CO, O2, and H2 on the Pt(100)-(5 × 20) surface were examined using flash desorption spectroscopy. Subsequent to adsorption at 300 K, CO desorbed from the (5×20) surface in three peaks with binding energies of 28, 31.6 and 33 kcal gmol?1. These states formed differently from those following adsorption on the Pt(100)-(1 × 1) surface, suggesting structural effects on adsorption. Oxygen could be readily adsorbed on the (5×20) surface at temperatures above 500 K and high O2 fluxes up to coverages of 23 of a monolayer with a net sticking probability to ssaturation of ? 10?3. Oxygen adsorption reconstructed the (5 × 20) surface, and several ordered LEED patterns were observed. Upon heating, oxygen desorbed from the surface in two peaks at 676 and 709 K; the lower temperature peak exhibited atrractive lateral interactions evidenced by autocatalytic desorption kinetics. Hydrogen was also found to reconstruct the (5 × 20) surface to the (1 × 1) structure, provided adsorption was performed at 200 K. For all three species, CO, O2, and H2, the surface returned to the (5 × 20) structure only after the adsorbates were completely desorbed from the surface.  相似文献   

7.
Reflection-absorption infrared spectroscopy has been combined with thermal desorption and surface coverage measurements to study nitrogen adsorption on a {111}-oriented platinum ribbon under ultrahigh vacuum conditions. Desorption spectra show a single peak (at 180 K) after adsorption at 120 K, giving a coverage-independent activation energy for desorption'of ~40 kJmol?1. The initial sticking probability at this temperature is 0.15, and the maximum uptake was ~1.1 × 1014 molecule cm?2. The adsorbed nitrogen was readily displaced by CO, h2 and O2. An infrared absorption band was observed with a peak located at 2238 ± 1 cm?1, and a halfwidth of 9 cm?1, with a molecular intensity comparable to that reported for CO on Pt{111}. The results are compared with data for chemisorption on other group VIII metals. An earlier assignment of infrared active nitrogen to B5 sites on these metals is brought into question by the present results.  相似文献   

8.
The adsorption of sulfur dioxide and the interaction of adsorbed oxygen and sulfur on Pt(111) have been studied using flash desorption mass spectrometry and LEED. The reactivity of adsorbed sulfur towards oxygen depends strongly on the sulfur surface concentration. At a sulfur concentration of 5 × 1014 S atoms cm?2 ((3 × 3)R30° structure) oxygen exposures of 5 × 10?5 Torr s do not result in the adsorption of oxygen nor in the formation of SO2. At concentrations lower than 3.8 × 1014 S stoms cm?2 ((2 × 2) structure) the thermal desorption following oxygen dosing at 320 K yields SO2 and O2. With decreasing sulfur concentration the amount of desorbing O2 increases and that of SO2 passes a maximum. This indicates that sulfur free surface regions, i.e. holes or defects in the (2 × 2) S structure, are required for the adsorption of oxygen and for the reaction of adsorbed sulfur with oxygen. SO2 is adsorbed with high sticking probability and can be desorbed nearly completely as SO2 with desorption maxima occurring at 400, 480 and 580 K. The adsorbed SO2 is highly sensitive to hydrogen. Small H2 doses remove most of the oxygen and leave adsorbed sulfur on the surface. After adsorption of SO2 on an oxygen predosed surface small amounts of SO3 were desorbed in addition to SO2 and O2 during heating. Preadsorbed oxygen produces variations of the SO2 peak intensities which indicate stabilization of an adsorbed species by coadsorbed oxygen.  相似文献   

9.
Mean sticking times of helium on a glass surface are determined at very low pressures from nonstationary molecular flow through glass capillaries. The temperature range covered is 13.8 °K to 20.4 °K. Resulting sticking times are of the order of 10?7 to 10?5 sec. They show a characteristic dependence on temperature and pressure. These measurements can be interpreted by means of a simple model: He-atoms mostly are bound to the surface with an adsorption energyE of 229 cal/mol?0.01 eV (±20%). However with a probability of 10?4 the energy is 530 cal/mol?0.023 eV (±6%). In both cases sticking times τ follow the equation τ=τ0exp(E/RT) where τ0 is about 10?9 to 10?10 sec.  相似文献   

10.
The adsorption and desorption of O2 on a Pt(111) surface have been studied using molecular beam/surface scattering techniques, in combination with AES and LEED for surface characterization. Dissociative adsorption occurs with an initial sticking probability which decreases from 0.06 at 300 K to 0.025 at 600 K. These results indicate that adsorption occurs through a weakly-held state, which is also supported by a diffuse fraction seen in the angular distribution of scattered O2 flux. Predominately specular scattering, however, indicates that failure to stick is largely related to failure to accommodate in the molecular adsorption state. Thermal desorption results can be fit by a desorption rate constant with pre-exponential νd = 2.4 × 10?2 cm2 s?1 and activation energy ED which decreases from 51 to 42 kcal/mole?1 with increasing coverage. A forward peaking of the angular distribution of desorbing O2 flux suggests that part of the adsorbed oxygen atoms combine and are ejected from the surface without fully accomodating in the molecular adsorption state. A slight dependance of the dissociative sticking probability upon the angle of beam incidence further supports this contention.  相似文献   

11.
The adsorption and decomposition of NO on Pd(110)   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
R. G. Sharpe  M. Bowker   《Surface science》1996,360(1-3):21-30
The sticking probability of nitric oxide (NO) on Pd(110) and the relative selectivity of the surface to nitrogen (N2) and nitrous oxide (N2O) production has been measured as a function of coverage and as a function of surface and gas temperatures using a molecular beam. It is found that, at low temperatures (<440 K), molecular adsorption occurs with an initial sticking probability of 0.40 ± 0.02, rising quickly to a maximum of about 0.48 ± 0.02 as coverage increases before falling towards saturation. Following adsorption at 170 K four distinct adsorption sites can be identified by subsequent TPD. Hence, if beaming occurs at a temperature above the TPD peak due to a given site, then that site cannot be populated and the saturation coverage is found to be reduced. At higher temperatures (440–650 K) the sticking probability is seen to decrease continuously as a function of coverage. At a given NO uptake, the sticking probability falls with temperature indicating that the rate of NO desorption is significant in this temperature range. In addition, dissociation occurs leading to the desorption of nitrogen and nitrous oxide leaving only oxygen adatoms on the surface. The oxygen adatoms poison further reaction but can be cleaned off, even at the lowest temperature at which dissociation occurs, by hydrogen or carbon monoxide. At the low temperature end of this range more nitrous oxide is produced than nitrogen but this ratio falls with temperature until, above 600 K, there is 100% selectivity to the production of nitrogen which we propose is due to the low lifetime of molecular NO on the surface. However, at such high temperatures, reaction only occurs on a few sites probably located at the few step edges present on the crystal.  相似文献   

12.
The interaction of oxygen with a Pt(110) crystal surface has been investigated by thermal desorption mass spectroscopy, LEED and AES. Adsorption at room temperature produces a β-state which desorbs at ~800 K. Complete isotopic mixing occurs in desorption from this state and it populates with a sticking probability which varies as (1 ? θ)2, both observations consistent with dissociative adsorption. The desorption is second order at low coverage but becomes first order at high coverage. The saturationcoverage is 3.5 × 1014 mol cm?2. The spectra have been computer analysed to determine the fraction desorbing by first (β1) and second (β2) order kinetics as a function of total fractional coverage θ using this fraction as the only adjustable parameter. The β1 desorption commences at θ ~ 0.25 and β1 and β2 contribute equally to the desorption at saturation. The kinetic parameters for β1 desorption were calculated from the variation of peak temperature with heating rate as ν1 = 1.7 × 109 s?1 and E1 = 32 kcal mole?1 whereas two different methods of analysis gave consistent parameters ν2 = 6.5 × 10?7 cm2 mol?1 s?1 and E2 = 29 and 30 kcal mole?1 for β2 desorption. The kinetics of desorptior are discussed in terms of the statistics for occupation of near neighbour sites. While many fea tures of the results are consistent with this picture, it is concluded that simple models considering either completely mobile or immobile adlayers with either strong or zero adatom repulsion are not completely satisfactory. The thermal desorption surface coverage has been correlated with the AES measurements and it has been possible to use the AES data for PtO as an internal standard for calibration of the AES oxygen coverage determination. At low temperature (170 K) oxygen populates an additional molecular α-state. Adsorption into the α- and β-states is competitive for the same sites and pre-saturation of the β-state at 300 K excludes the α-state. This, together with the AES observation that the adsorption is enhanced and faster at 450 than 325 K suggests a low activation energy for adsorption into the β-state.  相似文献   

13.
The adsorption of hydrogen on Pt (100) was investigated by utilizing LEED, Auger electron spectroscopy and flash desorption mass spectrometry. No new LEED structures were found during the adsorption of hydrogen. One desorption peak was detected by flash desorption with a desorption maximum at 160 °C. Quantitative evaluation of the flash desorption spectra yields a saturation coverage of 4.6 × 1014 atoms/cm2 at room temperature with an initial sticking probability of 0.17. Second order desorption kinetics was observed and a desorption energy of 15–16 kcal/mole has been deduced. The shapes of the flash desorption spectra are discussed in terms of lateral interactions in the adsorbate and of the existence of two substates at the surface. The reaction between hydrogen and oxygen on Pt (100) has been investigated by monitoring the reaction product H2O in a mass spectrometer. The temperature dependence of the reaction proved to be complex and different reaction mechanisms might be dominant at different temperatures. Oxygen excess in the gas phase inhibits the reaction by blocking reactive surface sites. At least two adsorption states of H2O have to be considered on Pt (100). Desorption from the prevailing low energy state occurs below room temperature. Flash desorption spectra of strongly bound H2O coadsorbed with hydrogen and oxygen have been obtained with desorption maxima at 190 °C and 340 °C.  相似文献   

14.
Auger electron spectroscopy (AES) has been employed to determine the relative coverage of oxygen on polycrystalline tungsten at high temperatures (1200 ?T ? 2500 K) and low O2 pressures (5 × 10?9 ?po2 ?5 × 10?6 Torr). We believe that this is the first demonstration that chemical analysis of solid surfaces by AES is possible even at temperatures as high as 2500 K. It is assumed that the relative oxygen coverage is directly proportional to the peak-to-peak amplitude of the first derivative of the 509 eV oxygen Auger peak. The experimental results illustrate the dependence of coverage on temperature and pressure, and it is shown that the results for low coverages may be described reasonably well by a simple first-order desorption model plus a semi-empirical expression for the equilibration probability (or sticking coefficient). On the basis of this approximate model, the binding energy of oxygen on tungsten is estimated as a function of coverage, giving a value of ~ 140 kcalmole in the limit of zero coverage.  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.
The adsorption of ammonia, hydrogen, and nitrogen on a Ru(0001) surface have been investigated by Auger electron spectroscopy, low-energy electron diffraction, and thermal flash desorption. The adsorption of ammonia on Ru(0001) can be divided into a low temperature mode (100 K) and a higher temperature mode (300–500 K). For a crystal temperature of 100 K the ammonia adsorbs into two weakly bound molecular γ states with s = 0.2. The ammonia desorbs as NH3 molecules with desorption energies of 0.32 and 0.46 eV. At 300–500 K adsorption occurs via an activated process with a low sticking probability (s ? 2 × 10?4).This adsorption is accompanied by dissociation and formation of an apparent (2 × 2) LEED pattern. Hydrogen adsorbs readily (s = 0.4) on Ru(0001) at 100 K and desorbs with 2nd order kinetics in the temperature range 350–450 K. Nitrogen does not appreciably adsorb on Ru(0001) even at 100 K; maximum nitrogen coverage obtained was estimated to be <2% of a monolayer. Changes in the ammonia flash desorption spectra after hydrogen preadsorption at 100 K will be discussed.  相似文献   

17.
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   

18.
The adsorption of oxygen on Ag(110), (111), and (100) surfaces has been investigated by LEED, Auger electron spectroscopy (AES), and by the measurement of work function changes and of kinetics, at and above room temperature and at oxygen pressures up to 10?5Torr. Extreme conditions of cleanliness were necessary to exclude the disturbing influences, which seem to have plagued earlier measurements. Extensive results were obtained on the (110) face. Adsorption proceeds with an initial sticking coefficient of about 3 × 10?3 at 300 K, which drops very rapidly with coverage. Dissociative adsorption via a precursor is inferred. The work function change is strictly proportional to coverage and can therefore be used to follow adsorption and desorption kinetics; at saturation, ΔΦ ≈ 0.85 eV. Adsorption proceeds by the growth of chains of oxygen atoms perpendicular to the grooves of the surface. The chains keep maximum separation by repulsive lateral interactions, leading to a consecutive series of (n × 1) superstructures in LEED, with n running from 7 to 2. The initial heat of adsorption is found to be 40 kcal/mol. Complicated desorption kinetics are found in temperature-programmed and isothermal desorption measurements. The results are discussed in terms of structural and kinetic models. Very small and irreproducible effects were observed on the (111) face which is interpreted in terms of a general inertness of the close-packed face and of some adsorption at irregularities. On the (100) face, oxygen adsorbs in a disordered structure; from ΔΦ measurements two adsorption states are inferred, between which a temperature-dependent equilibrium seems to exist.  相似文献   

19.
Two newly discovered phases on the Pt(100) surface produced by the adsorption of oxygen have been investigated using Rutherford baekscattering (RBS), nuclear microanalysis (NMA), work function changes (Δφ) and LEED. One phase is associated with the oxygensaturated surface (0.63 ± 0.03 monolayers0.81 × 1015 O atoms cm?2), where a very complex LEED pattern is observed; the other is observed at an average coverage of 0.44 ± 0.05 monolayers and gives rise to a (3 × 1) LEED pattern (when observed at room temperature). For both surfaces, RBS measurements indicate large (? 0.025 nm) Pt atom displacements. Also discussed is a new method for preparing the “clean” (1 × 1)-Pt(100) surface without the need for NO adsorption/decomposition.  相似文献   

20.
Starting at room temperature, N20 adsorption on rhenium proceeds dissociatively. Oxygen atoms remain on the surface while nitrogen molecules are desorbed. The overall process is characterized by an initial sticking coefficient value equal to 0.3 at 298 °K. In stationary conditions, and in a higher temperature range (> 1200°K) rhenium trioxide and oxygen atoms are the reaction products, depending on oxygen coverage on the surface. When the oxygen coverage is low, atomization, characterized by a reactive sticking probability of 0.2 is the only observable process. All the results are consistent with a model, previously proposed for the system oxygen-rhenium and oxygen-transition metals. The main differences in reaction rates between rhenium and oxygen or N2O are interpreted in terms of saturation coverages.  相似文献   

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