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1.
《Surface science》1986,172(2):349-362
Thermal desorption spectroscopy and LEED have been used to investigate the interaction of CO and hydrogen with a Pd0.75Cu0.25(111) single crystal surface with surface composition of about Pd0.7Cu0.3. The main objective was to make a comparison with the previously studied Pd0.67Ag0.33(111) (surface composition Pd0.1Ag0.9) and Pd(111) surfaces. In addition, the effect of preadsorbed H on subsequent CO dosage and the effect of adsorbed CO on postdosed hydrogen are described. Marked differences were found in the adsorption behaviour of the three surfaces towards CO and hydrogen. The maximum amount of H and CO that can be adsorbed at 250 K and pressures below 10−9 mbar is much lower on the PdCu surface than expected on the basis of the surface composition. This effect appears to be caused by a low heat of adsorption of hydrogen and CO and Pd singlet sites. Arguments are presented that singlet Pd sites or isolated Pd atoms in a Cu or Ag matrix are able to trap and dissociate the hydrogen molecule at 250 K. The CO desorption spectra are not influenced by pre- or postexposed hydrogen. Adsorbed CO hampers the uptake of hydrogen upon subsequent exposure to hydrogen. Postdosed CO causes adsorbed H adatoms to move to the bulk (adsorbed H). CO exposure at 250 K results in a very broad desorption plateau between 310 and 425 K with hardly discernable maxima. The results can be explained in terms of the size and relative concentration of the various Pd sites present on the surface (triplet, doublet and singlet sites). It can be concluded that for Pd (111) the heat of adsorption of both CO and H differ appreciably for the triplet, doublet and singlet sites. The effect of site has a larger contribution to the decrease of the heat of adsorption with coverage than the effect of lateral interaction in the adlayer. For Pd(111), PdCu(111) and PdAg(111) the effect of the available Pd sites is the major effect that determines the heat of adsorption, followed by the effect of lateral interaction and for the alloy surfaces the electronic or ligand effect.  相似文献   

2.
F. Solymosi  J. Kiss 《Surface science》1981,104(1):181-198
No detectable adsorbed species were observed after exposure of HNCO to a clean Cu(111) surface at 300 K. The presence of adsorbed oxygen, however, exerted a dramatic influence on the adsorptive properties of this surface and caused the dissociative adsorption of HNCO with concomitant release of water. The adsorption of HNCO at 300 K produced two new strong losses at 10.4 and 13.5 eV in electron energy loss spectra, which were not observed during the adsorption of either CO or atomic N. These loses can be attributed to surface NCO on Cu(111). The surface isocyanate was stable up to 400 K. The decomposition in the adsorbed phase began with the evolution of CO2. The desorption of nitrogen started at 700 K. Above 800 K, the formation of C2N2 was observed. The characteristics of the CO2 formation and the ratios of the products sensitively depended on the amount of preadsorbed oxygen. No HNCO was desorbed as such, and neither NCO nor (NCO)2 were detected during the desorption. From the comparison of adsorption and desorption behaviours of HNCO, N, CO and CO2 on copper surfaces it was concluded that NCO exists as such on a Cu(111) surface at 300 K. The interaction of HNCO with oxygen covered Cu(111) surface and the reactions of surface NCO with adsorbed oxygen are discussed in detail.  相似文献   

3.
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   

4.
Using molecular-beam relaxation techniques and isotopic exchange experiments, the water-formation reaction on Pd(111) has been shown to proceed via a Langmuir-Hinshelwood mechanism. The reaction product H2O is emitted from the surface with a cosine distribution. The rate-determining step is the formation of OHad in the reaction Oad + Had → OHad. The activation energy for this step is 7 kcal/mole with a pre-exponential factor, v, of 4 × 10?8 cm2 atom?1 sec?1. This value for v lies well below that observed for simple second-order desorption of dissociatively adsorbed diatomic gases, but is roughly of the order of that obtained for the oxidation of CO on Pd(111). The formation of H2O proceeds differently under conditions of excess O2 or H2. In an excess of H2, the kinetics is dominated by the transport of atomic hydrogen between the bulk and the surface as was found for the H?D exchange reaction on Pd(111). In an excess of O2, diffusion of hydrogen into the bulk is blocked by adsorbed oxygen and the hydrogen reservoir available for reaction at the surface is decreased by several orders of magnitude. This results in a drastic reduction of the reaction rate which can be reversed by increasing the partial pressure of H2.  相似文献   

5.
The thermal and electro impact behaviour of NO adsorbed on Pt(111) and Pt(110) have been studied by LEED, Auger spectroscopy, and thermal desorption. NO was found to adsorb non-dissociatively and with very similar low coverage adsorption enthalpies on the two surfaces at 300 K. In both cases, heating the adlayer resulted in partial dissociation and led to the appearance of N2 and O2 in the desorption spectra. The (111) surface was found to be significantly more active in inducing the thermal dissociation of NO, and on this surface the molecule was also rapidly desorbed and dissociated under electron impact. Cross sections for these processes were obtained, together with the desorption cross section for atomically bound N formed by dissociation of adsorbed NO. Electron impact effects were found to be much less important on the (110) surface. The results are considered in relation to those already obtained by Ertl et al. for NO adsorption on Ni(111) and Pd(111), and in particular, the unusual desorption kinetics of N2 production are considered explicitly. Where appropriate, comparisons are made with the behaviour of CO on Pt(111) and Pt(110), and the adsorption kinetics of NO on the (110) surface have been examined.  相似文献   

6.
The adsorption of hydrogen on clean Pd(110) and Pd(111) surfaces as well as on a Pd(111) surface with regular step arrays was studied by means of LEED, thermal desorption spectroscopy and contact potential measurements. Absorption in the bulk plays an important role but could be separated from the surface processes. With Pd(110) an ordered 1 × 2 structure and with Pd(111) a 1 × 1 structure was formed. Maximum work function increases of 0.36, 0.18 and 0.23 eV were determined with Pd(110), Pd(111) and the stepped surface, respectively, this quantity being influenced only by adsorbed hydrogen under the chosen conditions. The adsorption isotherms derived from contact potential data revealed that at low coverages θ ∞ √pH2, indicating atomic adsorption. Initial heats of H2 adsorption of 24.4 kcal/mole for Pd(110) and of 20.8 kcal/mole for Pd(111) were derived, in both cases Ead being constant up to at least half the saturation coverage. With the stepped surface the adsorption energies coincide with those for Pd(111) at medium coverages, but increase with decreasing coverage by about 3 kcal/mole. D2 is adsorbed on Pd(110) with an initial adsorption energy of 22.8 kcal/mole.  相似文献   

7.
8.
The adsorption of CO, O2, and H2O was studied on both the (111) and [6(111) × (100)] crystal faces of iridium. The techniques used were LEED, AES, and thermal desorption. Marked differences were found in surface structures and heats of adsorption on these crystal faces. Oxygen is adsorbed in a single bonding state on the (111) face. On the stepped iridium surface an additional bonding state with a higher heat of adsorption was detected which can be attributed to oxygen adsorbed at steps. On both (111) and stepped iridium crystal faces the adsorption of oxygen at room temperature produced a (2 × 1) surface structure. Two surface structures were found for CO adsorbed on Ir(111); a (√3 × √3)R30° at an exposure of 1.5–2.5 L and a (2√3 × 2√3)R30° at higher coverage. No indication for ordering of adsorbed CO was found on the Ir(S)-[6(111) × (100)] surface. No significant differences in thermal desorption spectra of CO were found on these two faces. H2O is not adsorbed at 300 K on either iridium crystal face. The reaction of CO with O2 was studied on Ir(111) and the results are discussed. The influence of steps on the adsorption behaviour of CO and O2 on iridium and the correlation with the results found previously on the same platinum crystal faces are discussed.  相似文献   

9.
The formic acid and methanol oxidation reaction are studied on Pt(1 1 1) modified by a pseudomorphic Pd monolayer (denoted hereafter as the Pt(1 1 1)-Pd1 ML system) in 0.1 M HClO4 solution. The results are compared to the bare Pt(1 1 1) surface. The nature of adsorbed intermediates (COad) and the electrocatalytic properties (the onset of CO2 formation) were studied by FTIR spectroscopy. The results show that Pd has a unique catalytic activity for HCOOH oxidation, with Pd surface atoms being about four times more active than Pt surface atoms at 0.4 V. FTIR spectra reveal that on Pt atoms adsorbed CO is produced from dehydration of HCOOH, whereas no CO adsorbed on Pd can be detected although a high production rate of CO2 is observed at low potentials. This indicates that the reaction can proceed on Pd at low potentials without the typical “poison” formation. In contrast to its high activity for formic acid oxidation, the Pd film is completely inactive for methanol oxidation. The FTIR spectra show that neither adsorbed CO is formed on the Pd sites nor significant amounts of CO2 are produced during the electrooxidation of methanol.  相似文献   

10.
The interaction of methanol with clean and oxygen-covered Pt(111) surfaces has been examined with high resolution electron loss spectroscopy (EELS) and thermal desorption spectroscopy (TDS). On the clean Pt(111) surface, methanol dehydrogenated above 140 K to form adsorbed carbon monoxide and hydrogen. On a Pt(111)-p(2 × 2)O surface, methanol formed a methoxy species (CH3O) and adsorbed water. The methoxy species was unstable above 170 K and decomposed to form adsorbed CO and hydrogen. Above room temperature, hydrogen and carbon monoxide desorbed near 360 and 470 K, respectively. The instability of methanol and methoxy groups on the Pt surface is in agreement with the dehydrogenation reaction observed on W, Ru, Pd and Ni surfaces at low pressures. This is in contrast with the higher stability of methoxy groups on silver and copper surfaces, where decomposition to formaldehyde and hydrogen occurs. The hypothesis is proposed that metals with low heats of adsorption of CO and H2 (Ag, Cu) may selectively form formaldehyde via the methoxy intermediate, whereas other metals with high CO and H2 chemisorption heats rapidly dehydrogenate methoxy species below room temperature.  相似文献   

11.
The interaction of O2, CO2, CO, C2H4 AND C2H4O with Ag(110) has been studied by low energy electron diffraction (LEED), temperature programmed desorption (TPD) and electron energy loss spectroscopy (EELS). For adsorbed oxygen the EELS and TPD signals are measured as a function of coverage (θ). Up to θ = 0.25 the EELS signal is proportional to coverage; above 0.25 evidence is found for dipole-dipole interaction as the EELS signal is no longer proportional to coverage. The TPD signal is not directly proportional to the oxygen coverage, which is explained by diffusion of part of the adsorbed oxygen into the bulk. Oxygen has been adsorbed both at pressures of less than 10-4 Pa in an ultrahigh vacuum chamber and at pressures up to 103 Pa in a preparation chamber. After desorption at 103 Pa a new type of weakly bound subsurface oxygen is identified, which can be transferred to the surface by heating the crystal to 470 K. CO2 is not adsorbed as such on clean silver at 300 K. However, it is adsorbed in the form of a carbonate ion if the surface is first exposed to oxygen. If the crystal is heated this complex decomposes into Oad and CO2 with an activation energy of 27 kcal/mol(1 kcal = 4.187 kJ). Up to an oxygen coverage of 0.25 one CO2 molecule is adsorbed per two oxygen atoms on the surface. At higher oxygen coverages the amount of CO2 adsorbed becomes smaller. CO readily reacts with Oad at room temperature to form CO2. This reaction has been used to measure the number of O atoms present on the surface at 300 K relative to the amount of CO2 that is adsorbed at 300 K by the formation of a carbonate ion. Weakly bound subsurface oxygen does not react with CO at 300 K. Adsorption of C2H4O at 110 K is promoted by the presence of atomic oxygen. The activation energy for desorption of C2H4O from clean silver is ~ 9 kcal/mol, whereas on the oxygen-precovered surface two states are found with activation energies of 8.5 and 12.5 kcal/mol. The results are discussed in terms of the mechanism of ethylene epoxidation over unpromoted and unmoderated silver.  相似文献   

12.
路战胜  罗改霞  杨宗献 《物理学报》2007,56(9):5382-5388
采用基于广义梯度近似的投影缀加平面波(projector augmented wave) 赝势和具有三维周期性边界条件的超晶胞模型,用第一性原理计算方法,计算并分析了Pd在CeO2(111)面上不同覆盖度时的吸附能,价键结构和局域电子结构. 考虑了单层Pd和1/4单层Pd两种覆盖度吸附的情况. 结果表明:1)在单层吸附时,Pd的最佳吸附位置是O的顶位偏向Ce的桥位;在1/4单层吸附时,Pd最易在O的桥位偏向次层O的顶位吸附.2) 单层覆盖度吸附时,吸附原子Pd之间的作用较强;1/4单 关键词: 三元催化剂 Pd 2')" href="#">CeO2 吸附 密度泛函理论  相似文献   

13.
Effect of Pd deposition on a clean Si(111) surface was studied by ELS and AES methods for submonolayer [1 ML = 7.8 × 1014atomscm-2forSi(111)] to several tens of monolayers. ELS spectra showed that the electronic nature of Pd-Si bonding for ? 1 ML of Pd coverage is different from Pd2Si formed for ? 3 ML. Namely, it was shown that some critical thickness for Pd on Si(111) exist for inducing interfacial intermixing reaction at room temperature.  相似文献   

14.
《Applied Surface Science》1988,31(1):163-172
Isosteric heats of adsorption ΔHad of CO and sticking coefficients S for CO and H2 on Rh(111) are determined by laser-induced thermal desorption (LITD) in which a pulsed laser beam is focused onto the surface, and rapid local heating yields a desorption signal that is proportional to the adsorbate coverage θ. ΔHad for CO falls from 32.0±2 kcal/mol at low coverage to 14 kcal/mol at saturation, and the desorption pre-exponential factor vd decreases from 1014±0.5 to 1010 s-1. ΔHad, vd, and S of CO all decline sharply above θ = 0.2, corresponding to the occupation of a second binding state. Sticking coefficients for CO and hydrogen indicate precursor intermediates in adsorption.  相似文献   

15.
Limited volume electrodes have been used to examine the processes of hydrogen electrosorption by Pd–Pt–Rh alloys under conditions of cyclic voltammetric (CV) experiments. Hydrogen adsorption and hydrogen absorption signals well separated from surface oxides generation and oxides reduction currents are seen on CV curves recorded in the full potential range. The possibility is demonstrated of simultaneous investigations of bulk processes of hydrogen insertion/removal and surface processes of carbon oxides adsorption. Due to different adsorption characteristics towards CO2 exhibited by the alloy components hydrogen adsorption and hydrogen absorption signals can be distinguished. Adsorbed CO2 causes partial blocking of hydrogen adsorbed on Pt and Rh surface atoms. The presence of adsorbed CO2 on the electrode surface does not influence significantly hydrogen insertion into the alloy. CO adsorption results in a strong inhibition of hydrogen adsorption. Hydrogen insertion into the bulk is not totally blocked but proceeds much slower than in the absence of CO adsorbates.  相似文献   

16.
《Surface science》1990,236(3):L372-L376
A new low temperature displacement mechanism for CO on the Pt(111) surface has been observed in the presence of high pressures of hydrogen (0.001 to 0.1 Torr H2). Temperature-programmed fluorescence yield near-edge spectroscopy (TP FYNES) was used to continuously monitor the CO coverage as a function of temperature both with and without hydrogen. For hydrogen pressures above 0.01 Torr, removal of CO begins at 130 K (Ed = 10.6 kcal/mol) instead of near the desorption temperature of 400 K (Ed = 26 kcal/mol). The large decrease in CO desorption energy appears to be caused by substantial repulsive interactions in the compressed monolayer induced by coadsorbed hydrogen. The new low temperature CO desorption channel appears to be caused by displacement of the compressed CO adlayer by coadsorbed hydrogen. In addition, the desorption activation energy for the main desorption channel of CO near 400 K is lowered by ~ 1 kcal/mol for hydrogen pressures in the 0.001 to 0.1 Torr range. These new results clearly emphasize the importance of in-situ methods capable of performing kinetic experiments at high pressures on well characterized adsorbed monolayers on single crystal surfaces. High coverages of coadsorbed hydrogen resulting from substantial overpressures may substantially modify desorption activation energies and thus coverages and kinetic pathways available even for strongly chemisorbed species. These phenomena may play an important role in surface reactions which occur at high pressure.  相似文献   

17.
CO-H interaction and H bulk dissolution on Pd(1 1 1) were studied by sum frequency generation (SFG) vibrational spectroscopy and density functional theory (DFT). The theoretical findings are particularly important to rationalize the experimentally observed mutual site blocking of CO and H and the effect of H dissolution on coadsorbate structures. Dissociative hydrogen adsorption on CO-precovered Pd(1 1 1) is impeded due to an activation barrier of ∼2.5 eV for a CO coverage of 0.75 ML, an effect which is maintained down to 0.33 ML CO. Preadsorbed hydrogen prevented CO adsorption at 100 K, while hydrogen was replaced from the surface by CO above 125 K. The temperature-dependent site blocking of hydrogen originates from the onset of hydrogen diffusion into the Pd bulk around 125 K, as shown by SFG and theoretical calculations using various approaches. When Pd(1 1 1) was exposed to 1:1 CO/H2 mixtures at 100 K, on-top CO was absent in the SFG spectra although hydrogen occupies only threefold hollow sites on Pd(1 1 1). DFT attributes the absence of on-top CO to H atoms diffusing between hollow sites via bridge sites, thereby destabilizing neighboring on-top CO molecules. According to the calculations, the stretching frequency of bridge-bonded CO with a neighboring bridge-bonded hydrogen atom is redshifted by 16 cm−1 when compared to bridging CO on the clean surface. Implications of the observed effects on hydrogenation reactions are discussed and compared to the C2H4-H coadsorption system.  相似文献   

18.
The chemisorption of CO on Co(0001) and on a polycrystalline specimen has been studied by LEED, Auger spectroscopy, and thermal desorption measurements. Annealing of the polycrystal was found to result in a surface dominated by crystallites of (0001) orientation in the surface plane, along with a few (101̄2) oriented crystallites. CO adsorbs on the clean surface at 300 K with an initial sticking probability of 0.9 and the system follows precursor state kinetics. The saturation coverage under UHV conditions corresponds to a well-ordered (√3 × √3)R30° structure; with PCO>5 × 10-9 a uniform compression of the adlayer takes place and a (√7 × √7)R19.2° structure begins to form. Models are proposed for these two ordered phases which are in agreement with the observed relative coverage data and the appearance of the corresponding desorption spectra. The desorption enthalpy of CO at low coverages is 103 ± 8 kJmol-1, and a fairly sharp fall in this enthalpy occurs for coverages >13. In many respects, the system's behaviour closely resembles that of Ni(111)-CO. Oxygen contamination leads to the appearance of a strongly adsorbed CO state with a desorption enthalpy of ~170 kJmol-1. This is reminiscent of a strongly adsorbed non-dissociated state of CO on Ru(101̄1) which occurs under similar conditions.  相似文献   

19.
《Surface science》1996,366(1):19-28
Coverage-dependent sticking probabilities and second-order rate constants for recombinative desorption of hydrogen from Rh(111) have been measured using molecular beam relaxation spectroscopy (MBRS) and time-resolved specular helium scattering. The sticking probability follows second-order Langmuir coverage dependence, with s0 equal to 0.01 ± 0.005. Under isothermal and nearly isosteric conditions over the coverage range 0.2–0.7 ML, the second-order rate constant for desorption is essentially independent of hydrogen coverage, in contrast to kinetic parameters determined from thermal desorption spectra.  相似文献   

20.
The reaction of NO with CO on Rh(111) has been studied with temperature programmed reaction (TPR). Comparisons are made with the reaction of O2 with CO and the reaction of NO with H2. The rate-determining step for both CO oxidation reactions is CO(a) + O(a) → CO2(g). Repulsive interactions between adsorbed CO and adsorbed nitrogen atoms lead to desorption of CO in a peak at 415 K which is in the temperature range where the reaction between CO(a) and O(a) produces CO2(g). Thus the extent of reaction of CO(a) with NO(a) is less than that between CO(a) and O(a) due to the lower coverage of CO caused by adsorbed N atoms and NO. A similar repulsive interaction between NO(a) and H(a) suppresses the NO + H2 reaction. CO + NO reaction behavior on Rh(111) is compared to that observed on Pt(111).  相似文献   

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