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1.
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   

2.
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   

3.
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   

4.
The chemisorption and reactivity of O2 and H2 with the sulfided Mo(100) surface and the basal (0001) plane of MoS2 have been studied by means of Thermal Desorption Spectroscopy (TDS), Auger Electron Spectroscopy (AES) and Low Energy Electron Diffraction (LEED). These studies have been carried out at both low (10?8–10?5Torr) and high (1 atm) pressures of O2 and H2. Sulfur desorbs from Mo(100) both as an atom and as a diatomic molecule. Sulfur adsorbed on Mo(100) blocks sites of hydrogen adsorption without noticeably changing the hydrogen desorption energies. TDS of 18O coadsorbed with sulfur on the Mo(100) surface produced the desorption of SO at 1150 K, and of S, S2 and O, but not SO2. A pressure of 1 × 10?7 Torr of O2 was sufficient to remove sulfur from Mo(100) at temperatures over 1100 K. The basal plane of MoS2 was unreactive in the presence of 1 atm of O2 at temperatures of 520 K. Sputtering of the MoS2 produced a marked uptake of oxygen and the removal of sulfur under the same conditions.  相似文献   

5.
The absolute coverage (θ) of deuterium adsorbed on Pt(111) in the ranges 180< T<440 K and 5 × 10?6 < P < 5 × 10?2 Pa D2 has been determined by nuclear microanalysis using the D(3He, p)4He reaction. From these data, the isosteric heat of adsorption (Ea) has been determined to be 67 ± 7 kJ mol?1 at θ ? 0.3. This heat of adsorption yields values of the pre-exponential for desorption (10?5 to 10?2 cm2 atom?1 s?1) that lie much closer to the normal range for a second order process than those determined from previous isosteric heat measurements. The Ea versus θ relationship indicates that the adsorbed D atoms are mobile and that there is a repulsive interaction of 6–8 kJ mol?1 at nearest neighbour distances. At 300 K the coverage decreases to ? 0.05 monolayer (? 8 × 1013 D atoms cm?2) as P→ 0, apparently invalidating a recent model of site exchange in the adsorbed layer.  相似文献   

6.
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   

7.
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   

8.
The initial oxidation of Al(111) has been studied with photoemission and surface EXAFS for single crystal surfaces. We find that the oxidation is pressure dependent and that at pressures below 2×10?7 Torr molecular oxygen chemisorbs while at pressures above 1×10?6 Torr the chemisorption is disassociative. These results are discussed in the context of other LEED and surface EXAFS studies.  相似文献   

9.
The adsorption of SO2 on Ag(110) and the reaction of SO2 with oxygen adatoms have been studied under ultrahigh vacuum conditions using low energy electron diffraction, temperature programmed reaction spectroscopy and photoelectron spectroscopy. Below 300 K, SO2 adsorbs molecularly giving p(1×2) and c(4×2) LEED patterns at coverages of one half and three quarter monolayers. respectively. At intermediate coverages, streaked diffraction patterns, similar to those reported for noble gas and alkali metal adsorption on the (110) face of face-centered cubic metals were observed, indicating adsorption out of registry with the surface. A feature at low binding energy in the ultraviolet photoemission spectrum appeared which was assigned to a weak chemisorption bond to the surface via the sulfur, analogous to bonding observed in SO2-amine charge transfer complexes and in transition metal complexes. SO2 exhibited three binding states on Ag(110) with binding energies of 41, 53 and 64 kJ mol?1; no decomposition on clean Ag(110) was observed. On oxygen pretreated Ag(110), SO2 reacted with oxygen adatoms to form SO3(a), as determined by X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy. Reacting preadsorbed atomic oxygen in a p(2 × 1) structure with SO2 resulted in a c(6 × 2) pattern for SO3(a). The adsorbed SO3(a) decomposed and disproportionated upon heating to 500 K to yield SO2(g), SO4(a) and subsurface oxygen.  相似文献   

10.
The influence of surface defects on the adsorption of CO by rhenium is investigated using LEED, AES and linear temperature programmed desorption. On both surfaces, thermal desorption reveals two adsorption states, the lower temperature α state being resolved into two substates, and one β state, all desorbing with first order kinetics. The α state is unaffected by the surface texture, its maximum population being the same on both surfaces, around 4 × 1014 molecules cm?2, similar to the value found for poly crystalline rhenium. On the other hand, the β state is strongly dependent on surface structure. On Re(0001) a maximum of 4 × 1013 molecules cm?2 was found, and 2 × 1014 molecules cm?2 on the stepped surface. The adsorption is activated and can be increased, by heating to 550 K, to 2 × 1014 molecules cm?2 on the basal plane and 3.5 × 1014 molecules cm?2 on the stepped surface. Ordered structures are now seen in LEED. Comparison of these results with previous results from polycrystalline rhenium indicate that the dissociation of β-CO on the latter surface must occur at defects other than steps.  相似文献   

11.
We have studied clean and oxidized (100)LaB6 grown from aluminum melts by making Auger, LEED, evaporation and work function measurements on well-defined surfaces. The clean surface shows no La enrichment when initially heated as high as 1700°C. Its LEED pattern is 1 × 1, indicating no surface reconstruction. Langmuir evaporation studies up to temperatures of 1700°C show only La and B evaporating non-congruently, and LaO. The activation energy for B evaporation from LaB6 (and from CeB6 and EuB6 also) is abot 5.5 eV, very close to that from elemental B. The rare-earth activation energies, however, vary, being highest for the rare-earth whose pure metal vapor pressure is lowest. Oxidation was carried out at room temperature using O2 pressures up to 10?7 Torr and at 1000°C using O2 pressures up to 10?4 Torr. At room temperature oxygen adsorption proceeeds to a saturated value indicated from LEED behavior to be about one monolayer. It produces a monotonic work function increase, which also saturates (at 1.40 V), varying linearly with the oxygen uptake. Oxidation at 1000°C is much more extensive than at room temperature, involving at least several monolayers, and results in a work function increase of 2.42 V. Results are discussed in terms of a terminal plane composed of La atoms, and adsorbed oxygen which, when given sufficient mobility, prefers bonding to La atoms at sites atop the B octahedra.  相似文献   

12.
The lattice constants of 2D solid Ar adsorbed on graphite are reported for many combinations of T and vapor pressure P, where 30 < T < 50 K and 10?7 < P < 10?4 Torr. Low-energy electron-diffraction patterns of high resolution provide accuracy to ±0.01 Å. Straight lines are fitted through points of constant lattice spacing on a log P versus T?1 plot; their slopes and intercepts yield isosteric heats of adsorption as well as estimates of the 2D isothermal compressibility of the Ar solid. Comparison is made to calorimetric measurements of isosteric heat, and to a previous LEED compressibility measurement performed isothermally at 42 K.  相似文献   

13.
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   

14.
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   

15.
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   

16.
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   

17.
E Bauer  T Engel 《Surface science》1978,71(3):695-718
The structure and composition of the interaction layer between oxygen and a W(110) surface for oxygen coverages θ above 0.5 monolayers is studied with LEED, AES, thermal desorption and work function change measurements. Oxygen is adsorbed by depositing WO2 followed by annealing. The results are interpreted in terms of a topmost layer consisting only of oxygen atoms followed by the formation of isolated three-dimensional WO3 crystals after saturation of the two-dimensional oxidation layer at 15 × 1014 O atoms cm?2. All available experimental evidence is compatible with this interpretation.  相似文献   

18.
Nuclear microanalysis (NMA) has been used to determine the absolute coverages of oxygen and CO adsorbed on Pt(111). The saturation oxygen coverage at 300 K is 3.9 ± 0.4 × 1014 O atoms cm?2 (θ = 0.26 ± 0.03), confirming the assignment of the LEED pattern as p(2 × 2). The saturation CO coverage at 300 K is 7.4 ± 0.3 × 1014 CO cm?2 (θ = 0.49 ± 0.02). The low temperature saturation CO coverages on Pt(100), (110) and (111) surfaces are compared.  相似文献   

19.
Epitaxially grown GaAs(001), (111) and (1?1?1?) surfaces and their behaviour on Cs adsorption are studied by LEED, AES and photoemission. Upon heat treatment the clean GaAs(001) surface shows all the structures of the As-stabilized to the Ga-stabilized surface. By careful annealing it is also possible to obtain the As-stabilized surface from the Ga-stabilized surface, which must be due to the diffusion of As from the bulk to the surface. The As-stabilized surface can be recovered from the Ga-stabilized surface by treating the surface at 400°C in an AsH3 atmosphere. The Cs coverage of all these surfaces is linear with the dosage and shows a sharp breakpoint at 5.3 × 1014 atoms cm?2. The photoemission reaches a maximum precisely at the dosage of this break point for the GaAs(001) and GaAs(1?1?1?) surface, whereas for the GaAs(111) surface the maximum in the photoemission is reached at a higher dosage of 6.5 × 1014 atoms cm?2. The maximum photoemission from all surfaces is in the order of 50μA Im?1 for white light (T = 2850 K). LEED measurements show that Cs adsorbs as an amorphous layer on these surfaces at room temperature. Heat treatment of the Cs-activated GaAs (001) surface shows a stability region of 4.7 × 1014 atoms cm?2 at 260dgC and one of 2.7 × 1014 atoms cm?2 at 340°C without any ordering of the Cs atoms. Heat treatment of the Cs-activated GaAs(111) crystal shows a gradual desorption of Cs up to a coverage of 1 × 1014 atoms cm?2, which is stable at 360°C and where LEED shows the formation of the GaAs(111) (√7 × √7)Cs structure. Heat treatment of the Cs-activated GaAs(1?1?1?) crystal shows a stability region at 260°C with a coverage of 3.8 × 1014 atoms cm?2 with ordering of the Cs atoms in a GaAs(1?1?1?) (4 × 4)Cs structure and at 340°C a further stability region with a coverage of 1 × 1014 at cm?2 with the formation of a GaAs(1?1?1?) (√21 × √21)Cs structure. Possible models of the GaAs(1?1?1?) (4 × 4)Cs, GaAs(1?1?1?)(√21 × √21)Cs and GaAs(111) (√7 × √7)Cs structures are given.  相似文献   

20.
Oxygen adsorbed on Pt(111) has been studied by means of temperature programmed thermal desorption spectroscopy (TPDS). high resolution electron energy loss spectroscopy (EELS) and LEED. At about 100 K oxygen is found to be adsorbed in a molecular form with the axis of the molecule parallel to the surface as a peroxo-like species, that is, the OO bond order is about 1. At saturation coverage (θmol= 0.44) a (32×32)R15° diffraction pattern is observed. The sticking probability S at 100 K as a function of coverage passes through a maximum at θ = 0.11 with S = 0.68. The shape of the coverage dependence is characteristic for adsorption in islands. Two coexisting types of adsorbed oxygen molecules with different OO stretching vibrations are distinguished. At higher coverages units with v-OO = 875 cm?1 are dominant. With decreasing oxygen coverages the concentration of a type with v-OO = 700 cm?1 is increased. The dissociation energy of the OO bond in the speices with v-OO = 875 cm?1 is estimated from the frequency shift of the first overtone to be ~ 0.5 eV. When the sample is annealed oxygen partially desorbs at ~ 160K, partially dissociates and orders into a p(2×2) overlayer. Below saturation coverage of molecular oxygen, dissociation takes place already at92 K. Atomically adsorbed oxygen occupies threefold hollow sites, with a fundamental stretching frequency of 480 cm?1. In the non-fundamental spectrum of atomic oxygen the overtone of the E-type vibration is observed, which is “dipole forbidden” as a fundamental in EELS.  相似文献   

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