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1.
The surface chemistry of NO and NO2 on clean and oxygen-precovered Pt(1 1 0)-(1 × 2) surfaces were investigated by means of high resolution electron energy loss spectroscopy (HREELS), X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS) and thermal desorption spectroscopy (TDS). At room temperature, NO molecularly adsorbs on Pt(1 1 0), forming linear NO(a) and bridged NO(a). Coverage-dependent repulsive interactions within NO(a) drive the reversible transformation between linear and bridged NO(a). Some NO(a) decomposes upon heating, producing both N2 and N2O. For NO adsorption on the oxygen-precovered surface, repulsive interactions exist between precovered oxygen adatoms and NO(a), resulting in more NO(a) desorbing from the surface in the form of linear NO(a). Bridged NO(a) experiences stronger repulsive interactions with precovered oxygen than linear NO(a). The desorption activation energy of bridged NO(a) from oxygen-precovered Pt(1 1 0) is lower than that from clean Pt(1 1 0), but the desorption activation energy of linear NO(a) is not affected by the precovered oxygen. NO2 decomposes on Pt(1 1 0)-(1 × 2) surface at room temperature. The resulted NO(a) (both linear NO(a) and bridged NO(a)) and O(a) repulsively interact each other. Comparing with NO/Pt(1 1 0), more NO(a) desorbs from NO2/Pt(1 1 0) as linear NO(a), and both linear NO(a) and bridged NO(a) exhibit lower desorption activation energies. The reaction pathways of NO(a) on Pt(1 1 0), desorption or decomposition, are affected by their repulsive interactions with coexisting oxygen adatoms.  相似文献   

2.
The adsorption of water on a RuO2(1 1 0) surface was studied by using high-resolution electron energy loss spectroscopy (HREELS) and thermal desorption spectroscopy (TDS). The first thermal desorption peak observed between 350 and 425 K is attributed to molecular water adsorbed on fivefold coordinated Rucus sites. Higher coverages of water give rise to TDS peaks between 190 and 160 K, which we attribute to water in the second layer bound to bridge oxygen, and multilayers, respectively. HREELS shows that H2O chemisorbs on Rucus sites through oxygen inducing a slight red shift of the vibrational frequency of Obridge atoms. Molecular adsorption is also confirmed by the presence of both the scissor and the libration modes showing the expected isotopic shift for D2O. The water adsorbed on the Rucus sites also forms hydrogen bonds with the bridge oxygen indicated by the broad intensity at the lower frequency side of the O-H stretch mode. HREELS and TDS results suggest that on the perfect RuO2(1 1 0) surface water dissociation is almost negligible.  相似文献   

3.
The adsorption of oxygen and the nanometer-scale faceting induced by oxygen have been studied on Ir(2 1 0). Oxygen is found to chemisorb dissociatively on Ir(2 1 0) at room temperature. The molecular desorption process is complex, as revealed by a detailed kinetic analysis of desorption spectra. Pyramid-shaped facets with {3 1 1} and (1 1 0) orientations are formed on the oxygen-covered Ir(2 1 0) surface when annealed to T?600 K. The surface remains faceted for substrate temperatures T<850 K. For T>850 K, the substrate structure reverts to the oxygen-covered (2 1 0) planar state and does so reversibly, provided that oxygen is not lost due to desorption or via chemical reactions upon which the planar (2 1 0) structure remains. A clean faceted surface was prepared through the use of low temperature surface cleaning methods: using CO oxidation, or reaction of H2 to form H2O, oxygen can be removed from the surface while preserving (“freezing”) the faceted structure. The resulting clean faceted surface remains stable for T<600 K. For temperatures above this value, the surface irreversibly relaxes to the planar state.  相似文献   

4.
The adsorption and decomposition of NO on a K-deposited Pd(1 1 1) surface were investigated using X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy, infrared reflection absorption spectroscopy, and temperature-programmed desorption. For the K-deposited Pd(1 1 1) surface, two different NO adsorption sites were observed in addition to the Pd site. On the clean Pd(1 1 1) surface, the adsorption of NO was purely molecular and reversible, but on the K-deposited surface, the adsorbed NO decomposed at two different temperatures, 530 and 610 K. These results indicate that the NO adsorption and decomposition sites were newly created by the deposition of K onto the Pd(1 1 1) surface.  相似文献   

5.
I. Nakamura 《Surface science》2006,600(16):3235-3242
Reactions between NO and CO on Rh(1 1 1) surfaces were investigated using infrared reflection absorption spectroscopy, X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy, and temperature-programmed desorption. NO adsorbed on the fcc, atop, and hcp sites in that order, whereas CO adsorbed initially on the atop sites and then on the hollow (fcc + hcp) sites. The results of experiments with NO exposure on CO-preadsorbed Rh(1 1 1) surfaces indicated that the adsorption of NO on the hcp sites was inhibited by preadsorption of CO on the atop sites, and NO adsorption on the atop and fcc sites was inhibited by CO preadsorbed on each type of site, which indicates that NO and CO competitively adsorbed on Rh(1 1 1). From a Rh(1 1 1) surface with coadsorbed NO and CO, N2 was produced from the dissociation of fcc-NO, and CO2 was formed by the reaction of adsorbed CO with atomic oxygen from dissociated fcc-NO. The CO2 production increased remarkably in the presence of hollow-CO. Coverage of fcc-NO and hollow-CO on Rh(1 1 1) depended on the composition ratio of the NO/CO gas mixture, and a gas mixture with NO/CO ? 1/2 was required for the co-existence of fcc-NO and hollow-CO at 273 K.  相似文献   

6.
Adsorption of NO on a Pt(1 1 1) surface pre-covered with a p(2 × 2) atomic oxygen layer has been studied in situ by high-resolution X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy and temperature-programmed XPS using third-generation synchrotron radiation at BESSY II, Berlin, combined with molecular beam techniques and ex situ by low energy electron diffraction and temperature-programmed desorption. O 1s XP spectra reveal that an ordered p(2 × 2)-O layer dramatically changes the adsorption behavior of NO as compared to the clean surface. The atomic oxygen occupies fcc hollow sites, and therefore blocks NO adsorption on these sites, which are energetically preferred on clean Pt(1 1 1). As a consequence, NO populates on-top sites at low coverage. At 110 K for higher coverages, NO can additionally adsorb on hcp hollow sites, thereby inducing a shift of the O 1s binding energy of atomic oxygen towards lower energies by about 0.25 eV. The bond strength of the hcp hollow NO species to the substrate is weakened by the presence of atomic oxygen. A sharp p(2 × 2) LEED pattern is observed for NO adsorption on the oxygen pre-covered surface, up to saturation coverage. The total saturation coverage of NO on Pt(1 1 1) pre-covered with varying amounts of oxygen (below 0.25 ML) decreases linearly with the coverage of oxygen. The initial sticking coefficient of NO is reduced from 0.96 on clean Pt(1 1 1) to 0.88 on a p(2 × 2) oxygen pre-covered surface.  相似文献   

7.
Thomas Rockey 《Surface science》2007,601(11):2307-2314
The adsorption kinetics, energetics and growth of naphthalene thin films, from submonolayer to about 10 layers, on a Ag(1 1 1) surface at low temperature in a ultrahigh vacuum chamber are examined by using temperature programmed desorption spectroscopy. The first layer adsorption occurs with a desorption energy of 85 ± 5 kJ/mole and results in an interface dipole of 5 ± 1 D, from charge transfer of approximately 0.2 e from naphthalene to Ag. The surface dipole induced inter-adsorbate repulsion causes the lowering of the adsorption energy within the first layer near the saturation coverage so that the second layer deposition begins before the completion of the first layer. The second layer is a metastable phase with desorption energy, 74 ± 3 kJ/mole, smaller than the multilayer desorption energy of 79 ± 5 kJ/mole. Fractional order desorption kinetics were found for both the metastable and the multilayer phases, suggesting desorption from 2-D islanding and 3-D islanding, respectively.  相似文献   

8.
The adsorption and desorption of glycine (NH2CH2COOH), vacuum deposited on a NiAl(1 1 0) surface, were investigated by means of Auger electron spectroscopy (AES), low energy electron diffraction (LEED), temperature-programmed desorption, work function (Δφ) measurements, and ultraviolet photoelectron spectroscopy (UPS). At 120 K, glycine adsorbs molecularly forming mono- and multilayers predominantly in the zwitterionic state, as evidenced by the UPS results. In contrast, the adsorption at room temperature (310 K) is mainly dissociative in the early stages of exposure, while molecular adsorption occurs only near saturation coverage. There is evidence that this molecularly adsorbed species is in the anionic form (NH2CH2COO). Analysis of AES data reveals that upon adsorption glycine attacks the aluminium sites on the surface. On heating part of the monolayer adsorbed at 120 K is converted to the anionic form and at higher temperatures dissociates further before desorption. The temperature-induced dissociation of glycine (<400 K) leads to a series of similar reaction products irrespective of the initial adsorption step at 120 K or at 310 K, leaving finally oxygen, carbon and nitrogen at the surface. AES and LEED measurements indicate that oxygen interacts strongly with the Al component of the surface forming an “oxide”-like Al-O layer.  相似文献   

9.
The O-bridge atoms on a stoichiometric RuO2(1 1 0) surface were removed by reaction with CO. The resulting reduced surface was then further exposed to CO. By means of thermal desorption spectroscopy and high-resolution electron energy-loss spectroscopy three adsorbed CO states were identified on bridge sites and assigned to double-bonded, single-bonded, and single-bonded species in the vicinity of O-bridge residues, respectively.  相似文献   

10.
We present a direct side-by-side comparison of the adsorption and desorption of nitrogen on the atomically-stepped Ru(1 0 9) surface and the atomically-flat Ru(0 0 1) surface. Both infrared reflection absorption spectroscopy (IRAS) and temperature programmed desorption (TPD) are employed in this study, along with density functional theory (DFT). We find that the chemisorptive terminal binding of N2 is stronger on the atomic step sites than on the terrace sites of Ru(1 0 9) as indicated by TPD and by a reduction of the singleton vibrational frequency, ν(N2), by ∼9 cm−1, comparing steps to terraces. In addition, we find that metal-metal compression effects on the terrace sites of Ru(1 0 9) cause stronger binding of N2 than found on the Ru(0 0 1) surface, as indicated by a reduction of the terrace-N2 singleton vibrational frequency by ∼11 cm−1 when compared to the singleton N2 mode on Ru(0 0 1). These spectroscopic results, comparing compressed terrace sites to Ru(0 0 1) sites and confirmed by TPD and DFT, indicate that N2 bonds primarily as a σ-donor to Ru. Using equimolar 15N2 and 14N2, it is found that dynamic dipole coupling effects present at higher N2 coverages may be partially eliminated by isotopically detuning neighbor oscillators. These experiments, considered together, indicate that the order of the bonding strength for terminal-N2 on Ru is: atomic steps > atomic terraces > Ru(0 0 1). DFT calculations also show that 4-fold coordinated N2 may be stabilized in several structures on the double-atom wide steps of Ru(1 0 9) and that this form of bonding produces substantial decreases in the N2 vibrational frequency and increases in the binding energy, compared to terminally-bound N2. These highly coordinated N2 species are not observed by IRAS.  相似文献   

11.
Eldad Herceg 《Surface science》2006,600(19):4563-4571
The formation of a well-ordered p(2 × 2) overlayer of atomic nitrogen on the Pt(1 1 1) surface and its reaction with hydrogen were characterized with reflection absorption infrared spectroscopy (RAIRS), temperature programmed desorption (TPD), low energy electron diffraction (LEED), Auger electron spectroscopy (AES), and X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS). The p(2 × 2)-N overlayer is formed by exposure of ammonia to a surface at 85 K that is covered with 0.44 monolayer (ML) of molecular oxygen and then heating to 400 K. The reaction between ammonia and oxygen produces water, which desorbs below 400 K. The only desorption product observed above 400 K is molecular nitrogen, which has a peak desorption temperature of 453 K. The absence of oxygen after the 400 K anneal is confirmed with AES. Although atomic nitrogen can also be produced on the surface through the reaction of ammonia with an atomic, rather than molecular, oxygen overlayer at a saturation coverage of 0.25 ML, the yield of surface nitrogen is significantly less, as indicated by the N2 TPD peak area. Atomic nitrogen readily reacts with hydrogen to produce the NH species, which is characterized with RAIRS by an intense and narrow (FWHM ∼ 4 cm−1) peak at 3322 cm−1. The areas of the H2 TPD peak associated with NH dissociation and the XPS N 1s peak associated with the NH species indicate that not all of the surface N atoms can be converted to NH by the methods used here.  相似文献   

12.
CO adsorption on a sulfur covered cobalt surface at 185 K has been studied using XPS, TDS, LEED, and WF measurements. As in the case of CO adsorption on the clean Co(0 0 0 1) surface, CO adsorbs and desorbs molecularly and no dissociation was observed. The saturation coverage of CO decreases linearly from 0.54 ML to 0.27 ML when the S pre-coverage increases to 0.25 ML. The WF increased during CO adsorption, but did not reach the value obtained for CO adsorption on the clean surface. The smaller work function change is explained by the reduced adsorption of CO on the sulfur-precovered surface. A reduction in the activation energy of desorption for CO from 113 kJ/mol to 88 kJ/mol was observed indicating weaker bonding of the CO molecules to the surface. The behavior of the CO/S/Co(0 0 0 1) system was explained by a combination of steric and electronic effects.  相似文献   

13.
Using infrared reflection absorption spectroscopy (IRRAS) and temperature programmed desorption (TPD), we investigated carbon monoxide (CO) adsorption and desorption behaviors on atomic checkerboard structures of Cu and Pd formed by Pd vacuum deposition at various temperatures of Cu(1 0 0). The 0.15-nm-thick Pd deposition onto a clean Cu(1 0 0) surface at room temperature (RT) showed a clear c(2 × 2) low-energy electron diffraction (LEED) pattern, i.e. Cu(1 0 0)-c(2 × 2)-Pd. The RT-CO exposure to the c(2 × 2) surfaces resulted in IRRAS absorption caused by CO adsorbed on the on-top sites of Pd. The LEED patterns of the Pd-deposited Cu(1 0 0) at higher substrate temperatures revealed less-contrasted c(2 × 2) patterns. The IRRAS intensities of the linearly bonded CO bands on 373-K-, 473-K-, and 673-K-deposited c(2 × 2) surfaces are, respectively, 25%, 22%, and 10% less intense than those on the RT-deposited surface, indicating that Pd coverages at the outermost c(2 × 2) surfaces decrease with increasing deposition temperature. In the initial stage of the 90-K-CO exposure to the RT surface, the band attributable to CO bonded to the Pd emerged at 2067 cm−1 and shifted to higher frequencies with increasing CO exposure. At saturation coverage, the band was located at 2093 cm−1. In contrast, two distinct bands around 2090 cm−1 were apparent on the spectrum of the 473-K-deposited surface: the CO saturation spectrum was dominated by an apparent single absorption at 2090 cm−1 for the 673-K-deposited surface. The TPD spectra of the surfaces showed peaks at around 200 and 300 K, which were ascribable respectively to Cu-CO and Pd-CO. Taking into account the TPD and IRRAS results, we discuss the adsorption-desorption behaviors of CO on the ordered checkerboard structures.  相似文献   

14.
The co-adsorption of CO and O on the unreconstructed (1 × 1) phase of Ir{1 0 0} was examined by low energy electron diffraction (LEED) and temperature programmed desorption (TPD). When CO is adsorbed at 188 K onto the Ir{1 0 0} surface precovered with 0.5 ML O, a mixed c(4 × 2)-(2O + CO) overlayer is formed. All CO is oxidised upon heating and desorbs as CO2 in three distinct stages at 230 K, 330 K and 430 K in a 2:1:2 ratio. The excess oxygen left on the surface after all CO has reacted forms an overlayer with a LEED pattern with p(2 × 10) periodicity. This overlayer consists of stripes with a local p(2 × 1)-O arrangement of oxygen atoms separated by stripes of uncovered Ir. When CO is adsorbed at 300 K onto the surface precovered with 0.5 ML O an apparent (2 × 2) LEED pattern is observed. LEED IV analysis reveals that this pattern is a superposition of diffraction patterns from islands of c(2 × 2)-CO and p(2  × 1)-O structures on the surface. Heating this co-adsorbed overlayer leads to the desorption of CO2 in two stages at 330 K and 430 K; the excess CO (0.1 ML) desorbs at 590 K.LEED IV structural analysis of the mixed c(4 × 2) O and CO overlayer shows that both the CO molecules and the O atoms occupy bridge sites. The O atoms show significant lateral displacements of 0.14 Å away from the CO molecules; the C-O bond is slightly expanded with respect to the gas phase (1.19 Å); the modifications of the Ir substrate with respect to the bulk-terminated surface are very small.  相似文献   

15.
The adsorption of CCl4 on Ag(1 1 1) has been investigated from 100 K to 300 K using absolute sticking probability measurement, temperature programmed desorption, Auger electron spectroscopy, low energy electron diffraction, ultra-violet photoelectron spectroscopy and X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy. At 100 K, CCl4 adsorbs molecularly with a sticking probability of 1.0, forming a (3 × 3) adsorption structure. At 300 K the following overall reaction occurs,
2CCl4(g)→4Cl(chem)+C2Cl4(g),  相似文献   

16.
On metals such as Zr, during hydrogen exposure, dissolution competes with desorption; this competition can be probed by thermal desorption at different heating rates. In the case of desorption from preadsorbed hydrogen, only ∼1% of the hydrogen can be desorbed even at heating rates of >1010 K s−1. Recent measurements of the dynamics of hydrogen released by water dissociation on Zr(0 0 0 1) [G. Bussière, M. Musa, P.R. Norton, K. Griffiths, A.G. Brolo, J.W. Hepburn, J. Chem. Phys. 124 (2006) 124704] have shown that the desorbing hydrogen originates from the recombinative desorption of adsorbed H-atoms and that over 25% of the water collisions lead to hydrogen desorption. To gain further insight into the desorption and dissolution of hydrogen and in an attempt to resolve the paradox of the different desorption yields from H2 vs. H2O exposures, we report new measurements of the laser induced thermal desorption (LITD) of hydrogen from Zr(0 0 0 1) at initial temperatures down to 90 K. The low temperature was chosen because work function measurements suggested that hydrogen adsorbed into only the outermost (surface site) of the two available adsorption sites (surface and subsurface), from which we postulated much more efficient desorption at high heating rates compared to desorption from the sub-surface sites. However, hydrogen desorption by LITD from Zr(0 0 0 1) at 90 K still only accounts for 1% of the adsorbed species, the remainder dissolving into the bulk at LITD heating rates. The different yields alluded to above remain unexplained (Bussière, 2006).  相似文献   

17.
Our measurements indicate that under temperature-programmed conditions the N2O decomposition occurs on Rh(1 0 0) between 60 and 140 K and results in the appearance of two N2 desorption peaks related to N2 molecules leaving the surface during and after N2O dissociation events, respectively. Both peaks are observed even at low initial coverages. This and other features of N2 desorption are explained by using Monte Carlo simulations taking into account attractive N2O-O lateral interactions stabilizing N2O adsorption. The results presented are compared with those obtained earlier for Rh(1 1 0).  相似文献   

18.
A.P. Farkas 《Surface science》2007,601(1):193-200
The adsorption, desorption and dissociation of ethanol have been investigated by work function, thermal desorption (TPD) and high resolution electron energy loss (HREELS) spectroscopic measurements on Mo2C/Mo(1 0 0). Adsorption of ethanol on this sample at 100 K led to a work function decrease suggesting that the adsorbed layer has a positive outward dipole moment By means of TPD we distinguished three adsorption states, condensed layer with a Tp = 162 K, chemisorbed ethanol with Tp = 346 K and irreversibly bonded species which decomposes to different compounds. These are hydrogen, acetaldehyde, methane, ethylene and CO. From the comparison of the Tp values with those obtained following their adsorption on Mo2C it was inferred that the desorption of methane and ethylene is reaction limited, while that of hydrogen is desorption limited process. HREEL spectra obtained at 100 K indicated that at lower exposure ethanol undergoes dissociation to give ethoxy species, whereas at high exposure molecularly adsorbed ethanol also exists on the surface. Analysis of the spectral changes in HREELS observed for annealed surface assisted to ascertain the reaction pathways of the decomposition of adsorbed ethanol.  相似文献   

19.
The adsorption of CO on Au(3 1 0) and Au(3 2 1) was studied using a combination of thermal desorption spectroscopy and high resolution core level photoemission spectroscopy. These vicinal Au surfaces both have 6-fold coordinated atoms at the step edges but have a different terrace structure. The CO adsorption behavior was found to be very similar for both surfaces. Three different desorption peaks due to chemisorbed CO were identified, which desorb around 100 K(α), 120 K(β) and 180 K(γ), respectively. The C1s and O1s spectra of the chemisorbed CO show a complex shake-up structure. Our experimental results indicate that CO only adsorbs on the step atoms. The different desorption peaks are explained by substrate-mediated long-range interactions between the adsorbates. Comparison with literature results shows that the CO adsorption energy is not only dependent on the coordination number of the Au atoms, but that the exact geometrical structure of the surface also plays a role.  相似文献   

20.
A quantitative low energy electron diffraction (LEED) analysis has been performed for the p(2 × 2)-S and c(2 × 2)-S surface structures formed by exposing the (1 × 1) phase of Ir{1 0 0} to H2S at 750 K. S is found to adsorb on the fourfold hollow sites in both structures leading to Pendry R-factor values of 0.17 for the p(2 × 2)-S and 0.16 for the c(2 × 2)-S structures. The distances between S and the nearest and next-nearest Ir atoms were found to be similar in both structures: 2.36 ± 0.01 Å and 3.33 ± 0.01 Å, respectively. The buckling in the second substrate layer is consistent with other structural studies for S adsorption on fcc{1 0 0} transition metal surfaces: 0.09 Å for p(2 × 2)-S and 0.02 Å for c(2 × 2)-S structures. The (1 × 5) reconstruction, which is the most stable phase for clean Ir{1 0 0}, is completely lifted and a c(2 × 2)-S overlayer is formed after exposure to H2S at 300 K followed by annealing to 520 K. CO temperature-programmed desorption (TPD) experiments indicate that the major factor in the poisoning of Ir by S is site blocking.  相似文献   

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