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1.
The adsorption, desorption, and surface structural properties of Na and NO on Ag(111), together with their coadsorption and surface reactivity, have been studied by LEED, Auger spectroscopy, and thermal desorption. On the clean surface, non-dissociative adsorption of NO into the a-state occurs at 300 K with an initial sticking probability of ~0.1, saturation occurring at a coverage of ~120. Desorption occurs reversibly without decomposition and is characterised by a desorption energy of Ed ~ 103 kJ mol?1. In the coverage regime 0 < θNa < 1, sodium adsorbs in registry with the Ag surface mesh and the desorption spectra show a single peak corresponding to Ed ~ 228 kJ mol?1. For multilayer coverages (1 < θ Na < 5) a new low temperature peak appears in the desorption spectra with Ed ~ 187 kJ mol?1. This is identified with Na desorption from an essentially Na surface, and the desorption energy indicates that Na atoms beyond the first chemisorbed layer are significantly influenced by the presence of the Ag substrate. The LEED results show that Na multilayers grow as a (√7 × √7) R19.2° overlayer, and are interpreted in a way which is consistent with the above conclusion. Coadsorption of Na and NO leads to the appearance of a more strongly bound and reactive chemisorbed state of NO (β-NO) with Ed ~ 121 kJ mol?1. β-NO appears to undego surface dissociation to yield adsorbed O and N atoms whose subsequent reactions lead to the formation of N2, N2O, and O2 as gaseous products. The reactive behaviour of the system is complicated by the effects of Na and O diffusion into the bulk of the specimen, but certain invariant features permit us to postulate an overall reaction mechanism, and the results obtained here are compared with other relevant work.  相似文献   

2.
The adsorption of Na and the coadsorption of Na and O2 on Ag(110) have been studied by LEED, thermal desorption, and Auger spectroscopy. For Na coverages in the regime 0 < θNa < 2 the Na desorption spectra show a single peak (β) corresponding to a desorption energy of ~195 kJ mol?1, and at θNa ~ 2 a (1 × 2) LEED pattern appears. At still higher coverages (2 < θNa < 5), a (1 × 3) surface phase is formed, and a new peak (α) appears in the desorption spectra; this is identified with Na desorption from an essentially Na surface. The desorption energy of αNa (~174 kJ mol?1) indicates that Na adatoms beyond the first chemisorbed layer are significantly influenced by the presence of the Ag substrate. The initial sticking probability of O2 on Na-dosed Ag(110) is enormously enhanced over the clean surface value, being of the order of unity, and O2 chemisorption ultimately leads to a (4 × 1) surface structure. The presence either subsurface Na alone, or of both Na and O below the surface, causes substantial changes in surface behaviour. In the former case, submonolayer doses of Na lead to the appearance of a (1 × 2) structure; and in the latter case, Na + O2 coadsorption results in a c(4 × 2) structure. Auger spectroscopy indicates that the Ag(110)-c(4 × 2)NaO phase forms with a constant stoichiometry which is independent of the initial Na dose. The Na:O ratio in this adlayer is believed to be of the order of unity. The structures of the various ordered phases, the nature of the AgNa bonding, and the interatomic spacing between the alkali adatoms on Ag(110) are discussed.  相似文献   

3.
Adsorption of monolayer amounts of bismuth on the 100 surface plane of tungsten has been studied by probe hole field emission microscopy and electron spectroscopy. Sub-monolayer bismuth forms a relatively strongly bound layer of bismuth-tungsten dipoles with dipole moment μ = (0.18 ± 0.02) × 10?30C m and polarizability α = (6.3 ± 1.3) × 10?40J V?2m2. Changes in work function and their dependence on temperature closely parallel those produced by adsorbed lead which was shown by LEED to form c(2 × 2), p(2 × 2) and (1 × 1) structures. Bismuth is thought to behave in a similar way, but, unlike lead, forms a second monolayer which replicates the first. Electron spectroscopy shows that sub-monolayer bismuth removes the surface state (Swanson) peak and at monolayer coverage a new peak emerges and shifts with increasing coverage. Using Gadzuk's theory, this peak is tentatively attributed to the 2P level in bismuth adatoms which form a p(2 × 2) structure in the first and second monolayers. Its shift with coverage is ascribed to an increase in the local surface field. There remains the difficulty of reconciling the proposed occupation of the 2P level with the observed small positive charge on the bismuth adatom.  相似文献   

4.
The chemisorption of nitric oxide on (110) nickel has been investigated by Auger electron spectroscopy, LEED and thermal desorption. The NO adsorbed irreversibly at 300 K and a faint (2 × 3) structure was observed. At 500 K this pattern intensified, the nitrogen Auger signal increased and the oxygen signal decreased. This is interpreted as the dissociation of NO which had been bound via nitrogen to the surface. By measuring the rate of the decomposition as a function of temperature the dissociation energy is calculated at 125 kJ mol?1. At ~860 K nitrogen desorbs. The rate of this desorption has been measured by AES and by quantitative thermal desorption. It is shown that the desorption of N2 is first order and that the binding energy is 213 kJ mol?1. The small increase in desorption temperature with increasing coverage is interpreted as due to an attractive interaction between adsorbed molecules of ~14 kJ mol?1 for a monolayer. The (2 × 3) LEED pattern which persists from 500–800 K is shown to be associated with nitrogen only. The same pattern is obtained on a carbon contaminated crystal from which oxygen has desorbed as CO and CO2. The (2 × 3) pattern has spots split along the (0.1) direction as (m, n3) and (m2, n). This is interpreted as domains of (2 × 3) structures separated by boundaries which give phase differences of 3 and π. The split spots coalesce as the nitrogen starts to desorb. A (2 × 1) pattern due to adsorbed oxygen was then observed to 1100 K when the oxygen dissolved in the crystal leaving the nickel (110) pattern.  相似文献   

5.
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   

6.
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   

7.
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   

8.
The adsorption, desorption, and structural properties of chlorine adlayers on Cu(111) and Ag(111) have been studied by LEED, Auger, Δ?, and thermal desorption measurements. Ancillary experiments were also carried out on cuprous chloride for purposes of comparison with the Cu(111)-Cl data. Chlorine adsorption is rapid on both metals and follows precursor kinetics, the absolute initial sticking probabilities being ~1.0 (Cu) and ~0.5 (Ag). Δ? results suggest that significant depolarisation of the chemisorption bond occurs at high coverages, the maximum values being + 1.2 eV (Cu) and + 1.8 eV (Ag). On Cu(111), adsorption leads to the formation of a sequence of well-ordered phases; in order of increasing coverage, these are as follows: (√3 × √3)R30°, (12√3 × 12√3)R30°, (4√7 × 4√7)R19.2°, and (6√3 × 6√3)R30°. On Ag(111) (√3 × √3)R30°, and (10 × 10) structures are observed. All six structures are susceptible to a straightforward interpretation in terms of coincidence lattices resulting from the progressive uniform compression of a hexagonal layer of Cl atoms. This interpretation is consistent with all the experimental results, and gives values for the nearest-neighbour ClCl spacing on both Cu(111) and Ag(111) which are in good agreement with other work on other surfaces. Chlorine desorbs exclusively as atoms from both metals with first-order desorption kinetics, and apparent desorption energies of 236 (Cu) and 209 (Ag) kJ mol?1. These values, which depend on an assumed pre-exponential factor of 1013 s?1, are shown to be inconsistent with the thermochemical constraints on the system necessitated by the complete absence of Cl2 desorption. Lower limits for the pre-exponential factors are then deduced, and the values are found to be consistent with the differences between the CuCl and AgCl systems.  相似文献   

9.
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   

10.
Adsorption of chlorine on Ag(100) at 298 K leads to the formation of a chemisorbed over layer of Cl atoms with Δφ = 1.4 eV and exhibiting a sharp c(2 × 2) LEED pattern. This layer is impervious to electron stimulated desorption (ESD). At 430 K (well below the desorption temperature) Δφ decreases quite rapidly to +0.9 eV, the LEED pattern deteriorates and ESD is observed. The temperature dependence of the (12, 12) LEED beam indicates that an irreversible change in surface Debye temperature has occurred. On raising the temperature further, evaporation of the adiayer occurs with AgCl as the sole desorption product. These results suggest that an overlayer → silver chloride transition has occurred, a conclusion which is supported by studying the properties of AgCl dosed surfaces. Chlorine dosing never leads to halide growth beyond the monolayer stage. Multilayer growth of AgCl is investigated by dosing with AgCl(g). It is found that the desorption spectra evolve in an unusual way and the observed energetics of AgCl evaporation are accounted for in terms of the reduced lattice energy of small adsorbed crystallites. LEED shows that these crystallites re-orient from (100) to (111) as their size increases.  相似文献   

11.
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   

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.
樊永年 《物理学报》1985,34(6):813-819
用能量为1千电子伏,束流为6微安的氮离子轰击含有痕量碳和氧的钼(001)和钼(110)表面10至15分钟,在俄歇能谱中出现了很强的氮的俄歇峰。从室温直到350℃退火,低能电子衍射观察表明,表面是无序层。样品加热到530℃和650℃之间,在钼(001)表面上得到c(2×2)-氮,p(2×2)-氮和(4(21/2)×21/2)R45°-氮、氧三种结构的低能电子衍射图;在密堆的钼(110)面得到单一结构的c(7×3)-氮的低能电子衍射图。低能电子衍射图与热脱附密切相关 关键词:  相似文献   

14.
The adsorption of chlorine on the Ag(111) surface has been studied using LEED, Auger and temperature programmed desorption. Chlorine adsorbs dissociately with an initial sticking probability of ~ 0.4, and a precursor state is implicated in the chemisorption process. The chlorine appears to form a close-packed monolayer with the same packing density as in AgCl(111), and is epitaxially related to the substrate mesh. Chlorine continues to adsorb above a monolayer in coverage, though the sticking probability drops precipitately, being ~ 0.01 after the adsorption of 5 monolayers at 300 K. There is little increase in the chlorine Auger signal above one monolayer coverage at 300 K, but when adsorption is carried out at 240 K the chlorine signal is more than doubled. This is interpreted as being due to the formation of a layer structure of alternate Cl and Ag layers at the lower temperature, while adsorption at 300 K results in dissolution of subsurface Cl into the bulk of the crystal. Upon heating, the low temperature layer structure is destroyed, the chlorine signal diminishes to a limiting value at 450 K equivalent to the value for one adsorbed monolayer — apparently due to the dissolution of the near surface Cl layers into the bulk. However, the chlorine re-emerges at the surface at ~ 600 K, probably due to an exothermic heat of solution of Cl in the silver lattice. Desorption from the multilayers peaks at 670 K and both AgCl and Ag are desorbed coincidently with kinetics identical to those for the sublimation of bulk AgCl (ΔH = 235 kJ mol?1, ΔS = 90 JK?1 mol?1). After the multilayers have desorbed, the final Cl layer desorbs in a higher temperature peak ( ~ 760 K) as AgCl (no silver desorption) which shows complex desorption kinetics indicative of the strong influence of a precursor state in the desorption process.  相似文献   

15.
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   

16.
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   

17.
The adsorption of water of Ni(110) has been studied by nuclear reaction analysis (NRA), thermal desorption spectroscopy (TDS), LEED and work function measurements (Δφ). The major findings of this study are: (1) the saturation coverage of the first chemisorbed layer of water is slightly less than 0.5 water molecules per surface Ni atom or 0.5 ML (1 ML = 1 MONOLAYER = 1.14 × 1015 molecules cm−2) and the layer exhibits a c(2 × 2) LEED pattern; (2) this water desorbs in three separate desorption states; (3) the slightly less strongly bound, second layer of water can be distinguished from subsequent “ice” layers by a discrete work function change. These results are discussed in terms of a recently published model of Benndorf and Madey [C. Benndorf and T.E. Madey, Surf. Sci. 194 (1988) 63].  相似文献   

18.
LEED, AES, UPS and XPS were used to study submonolayer coverages of potassium on Fe(110). At room temperature the maximum potassium coverage is characterized by a LEED superstructure. This LEED pattern is interpreted as being due to a hexagonal close-packed K layer on Fe(110), resulting in a maximum atom density of 5.3 × 1014 cm?2, i.e.θ k = 0.31. The work function change and the shift of the K(2p) and K(3p) core levels with potassium coverage indicate a charge transfer from potassium to iron at low potassium coverages.  相似文献   

19.
The interaction of NO with a Ni (111) surface was studied by means of LEED, AES, UPS and flash desorption spectroscopy. NO adsorbs with a high sticking probability and may form two ordered structures (c4 × 2 and hexagonal) from (undissociated) NOad. The mean adsorption energy is about 25 kcalmole. Dissociation of adsorbed NO starts already at ?120°C, but the activation energy for this process increases with increasing coverage (and even by the presence of preadsorbed oxygen) up to the value for the activation energy of NO desorption. The recombination of adsorbed nitrogen atoms and desorption of N2 occurs around 600 °C with an activation energy of about 52 kcalmole. A chemisorbed oxygen layer converts upon further increase of the oxygen concentration into epitaxial NiO. A mixed layer consisting of Nad + Oad (after thermal decomposition of NO) exhibits a complex LEED pattern and can be stripped of adsorbed oxygen by reduction with H2. This yields an Nad overlayer exhibiting a 6 × 2 LEED pattern. A series of new maxima at ≈ ?2, ?8.8 and ?14.6 eV is observed in the UV photoelectron spectra from adsorbed NO which are identified with surface states derived from molecular orbitals of free NO. Nad as well as Oad causes a peak at ?5.6 eV which is derived from the 2p electrons of the adsorbate. The photoelectron spectrum from NiO agrees closely with a recent theoretical evaluation.  相似文献   

20.
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   

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