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1.
The interaction of hydrogen (deuterium) with different modified Pd(1 1 1) surfaces has been investigated. The focus was put on the energy and angel dependence of the desorbing molecules from oxygen covered, potassium covered and vanadium oxide covered surfaces. Conventional adsorption/desorption as well as permeation/desorption experiments were performed. For the oxygen covered surface optimum reaction rates for water production and the energy distribution of the reaction products were determined, both for the reaction of oxygen with molecular hydrogen as well as with atomic hydrogen. Potassium on the surface enhances the activation barrier for hydrogen adsorption resulting in a hyper-thermal desorption flux and a forward focused angular distribution of desorption. Permeation/desorption of deuterium from ultra-thin vanadium oxide films yield mainly thermalized desorbing molecules or slightly hyper-thermal, depending on the oxidation state of the surface oxide.  相似文献   

2.
J. Wang 《Surface science》2006,600(21):4855-4859
Presented are thermal desorption spectroscopy (TDS) and adsorption probability measurements of iso-butane on the Zn-terminated surface of ZnO. The initial adsorption probability, S0, decreases linearly from 0.57 to 0.22 (±0.02) with impact energy, Ei = 0.74-1.92 eV, and is independent of adsorption temperature, Ts = 91-114 K (±5 K), indicating non-activated molecular adsorption. The coverage, Θ, dependent adsorption probabilities, S(Θ), show a cross-over from adsorbate-assisted adsorption (S increases with Θ) to Kisliuk-like dynamics at about the desorption temperature of iso-butane bi-layers (∼110 K). Thus, the adsorption dynamics are precursor-mediated. The enhanced (gas-surface) mass-match, caused by forming a second layer of the alkane, leads to adsorbate-assisted adsorption. A direct fitting procedure of the TDS data yields a pre-exponential factor of 2.5 × 1013/s and a coverage dependent heat of adsorption of Ed(Θ) = 39 − 6 ∗ Θ + 2.5 ∗ exp(−Θ/0.07) kJ/mol.  相似文献   

3.
The abstraction of chemisorbed hydrogen on Si(1 0 0) and Si(1 1 1) induced by atomic hydrogen has been investigated by studying with a rotatable mass spectrometer the angle-resolved molecular hydrogen desorption from a Si surface exposed to a chopped beam of atomic hydrogen. The angular distributions of desorbing molecules can be fitted independent of the surface temperature and the surface reconstruction by a cosnθ function with n < 1 for Si(1 0 0) and Si(1 1 1). These results are interpreted by non-activated pathways involving site-specific hot-atom abstraction on two adjacent silicon atoms with one having a dangling bond. Possible mechanisms according to the surface reconstructions are discussed.  相似文献   

4.
Infrared reflection absorption spectroscopy (IRRAS) was used to investigate carbon monoxide (CO) adsorption on 0.15 nm-thick-0.6 nm-thick Pd-deposited Pt(1 1 1) bimetallic surfaces: Pdx/Pt(1 1 1) (where x is the Pd thickness in nanometers) fabricated using molecular beam epitaxial method at substrate temperatures of 343 K, 473 K, and 673 K. Reflection high-energy electron diffraction (RHEED) measurements for Pd0.15-0.6 nm/Pt(1 1 1) surfaces fabricated at 343 K showed that Pd grows epitaxially on a clean Pt(1 1 1), having an almost identical lattice constant of Pt(1 1 1). The 1.0 L CO exposure to the clean Pt(1 1 1) at room temperature yielded linearly bonded and bridge-bonded CO-Pt bands at 2093 and 1855 cm−1. The CO-Pt band intensities for the CO-exposed Pdx/Pt(1 1 1) surfaces decreased with increasing Pd thickness. For Pd0.3 nm/Pt(1 1 1) deposited at 343 K, the 1933 cm−1 band caused by bridge-bonded CO-Pd enhanced the spectral intensity. The linear-bonded CO-Pt band (2090 cm−1) almost disappeared and the bridge-bonded CO-Pd band dominated the spectra for Pd0.6 nm/Pt(1 1 1). With increasing substrate temperature during the Pd depositions, the relative band intensities of the CO-Pt/CO-Pd increased. For the Pd0.3 nm/Pt(1 1 1) deposited at 673 K, the linear-bonded CO-Pt and bridge-bonded CO-Pd bands are located respectively at 2071 and 1928 cm−1. The temperature-programmed desorption (TPD) spectrum for the 673 K-deposited Pd0.3 nm/Pt(1 1 1) showed that a desorption signal for the adsorbed CO on the Pt sites decreased in intensity and shifted ca. 20 K to a lower temperature than those for the clean Pt(1 1 1). We discuss the CO adsorption behavior on well-defined Pd-deposited Pt(1 1 1) bimetallic surfaces.  相似文献   

5.
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   

6.
S. Funk 《Applied Surface Science》2007,253(17):7108-7114
We attempt to correlate qualitatively the surface structure with the chemical activity for a metal surface, Cr(1 1 0), and one of its surface oxides, Cr2O3(0 0 0 1)/Cr(1 1 0). The kinetics and dynamics of CO2 adsorption have been studied by low energy electron diffraction (LEED), Aug er electron spectroscopy (AES), and thermal desorption spectroscopy (TDS), as well as adsorption probability measurements conducted for impact energies of Ei = 0.1-1.1 eV and adsorption temperatures of Ts = 92-135 K. The Cr(1 1 0) surface is characterized by a square shaped LEED pattern, contamination free Cr AES, and a single dominant TDS peak (binding energy Ed = 33.3 kJ/mol, first order pre-exponential 1 × 1013 s−1). The oxide exhibits a hexagonal shaped LEED pattern, Cr AES with an additional O-line, and two TDS peaks (Ed = 39.5 and 30.5 kJ/mol). The initial adsorption probability, S0, is independent of Ts for both systems and decreases exponentially from 0.69 to 0.22 for Cr(1 1 0) with increasing Ei, with S0 smaller by ∼0.15 for the surface oxide. The coverage dependence of the adsorption probability, S(Θ), at low Ei is approx. independent of coverage (Kisliuk-shape) and increases initially at large Ei with coverage (adsorbate-assisted adsorption). CO2 physisorbs on both systems and the adsorption is non-activated and precursor mediated. Monte Carlo simulations (MCS) have been used to parameterize the beam scattering data. The coverage dependence of Ed has been obtained by means of a Redhead analysis of the TDS curves.  相似文献   

7.
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   

8.
To investigate the possibility of manipulating the surface chemical properties of finely dispersed metal films through ferroelectric polarization, the interaction of palladium with oppositely poled LiNbO3(0 0 0 1) substrates was characterized. Low energy ion scattering indicated that the Pd tended to form three-dimensional clusters on both positively and negatively poled substrates even at the lowest coverages. X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS) showed an upward shift in the binding energy of the Pd 3d core levels of 0.9 eV at the lowest Pd coverages, which slowly decayed toward the bulk value with increasing Pd coverage. These shifts were independent of the poling direction of the substrate and similar to those attributed to cluster size effects on inert supports. Thus, the spectroscopic data suggested that Pd does not interact strongly with LiNbO3 surfaces. The surface chemical properties of the Pd clusters were investigated using CO temperature programmed desorption. On both positively and negatively poled substrates, CO desorption from freshly deposited Pd showed a splitting of the broad 460 K desorption peak characteristic of bulk Pd into distinct peaks at 270 and 490 K as the Pd coverage was decreased below 1.0 ML; behavior that also resembles that seen on inert supports. It was found that a small fraction of the adsorbed CO may dissociate (<2%) for Pd on both positively and negatively poled substrates. The thermal response of the smaller Pd clusters on the LiNbO3 surfaces, however, was different from that of inert substrates. In a manner similar to Nb2O5, when CO desorption experiments were carried out a second time, the adsorption capacity decreased and the higher temperature desorption peak shifted from 490 K to below 450 K. This behavior was independent of the substrate poling direction. Thus, while there was evidence that LiNbO3 does not behave as a completely inert support, no significant differences between positively and negatively poled surfaces were observed. This lack of sensitivity of the surface properties of the Pd to the poling direction of the substrate is attributed to the three-dimensional Pd clusters being too thick for their surfaces to be influenced by the polarization of the underlying substrate.  相似文献   

9.
J. Garra  D.A. Bonnell 《Surface science》2009,603(8):1106-1183
Water and methanol temperature programmed desorption (TPD) measurements were performed on the positive (c+) and negative (c) surfaces of poled ferroelectric lithium niobate (LiNbO3) single crystals. The results indicate that the molecule-surface interactions are both coverage and polarization-dependent. From a comparison of the TPD spectra for the positive and negative surfaces, it is shown that the desorption temperatures of water and methanol are consistently lower on the negative surface by 15 K and 20 K, respectively. The TPD spectra were simulated using the Polanyi-Wigner equation with a coverage-dependent energy term. These calculations show that the polarization dependence of the desorption temperature is due to a difference in the zero-coverage desorption energies on the two surfaces equal to a few kJ per mole. The mechanism for the polarization effect is explored with in situ pyroelectric voltage measurements, which indicate that a surface voltage of ±2 mV develops in the LiNbO3(0 0 0 1) samples during TPD measurements. The magnitude of the pyroelectric-induced surface charge is heating rate dependent.  相似文献   

10.
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   

11.
Yunsheng Ma 《Surface science》2009,603(7):1046-1391
The formation, stability and CO adsorption properties of PdAg/Pd(1 1 1) surface alloys were investigated by X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS) and by adsorption of CO probe molecules, which was characterized by temperature-programmed desorption (TPD) and high resolution electron energy loss spectroscopy (HREELS). The PdAg/Pd(1 1 1) surface alloys were prepared by annealing (partly) Ag film covered Pd(1 1 1) surfaces, where the Ag films were deposited at room temperature. Surface alloy formation leads to a modification of the electronic properties, evidenced by core-level shifts (CLSs) of both the Pd(3d) and Ag(3d) signal, with the extent of the CLSs depending on both initial Ag coverage and annealing temperature. The role of Ag pre-coverage and annealing temperature on surface alloy formation is elucidated. For a monolayer Ag covered Pd(1 1 1) surface, surface alloy formation starts at ∼450 K, and the resulting surface alloy is stable upon annealing at temperatures between 600 and 800 K. CO TPD and HREELS measurements demonstrate that at 120 K CO is exclusively adsorbed on Pd surface atoms/Pd sites of the bimetallic surfaces, and that the CO adsorption behavior is dominated by geometric ensemble effects, with adsorption on threefold hollow Pd3 sites being more stable than on Pd2 bridge sites and finally Pd1 a-top sites.  相似文献   

12.
Jakub Drnec 《Surface science》2009,603(13):2005-2014
The adsorption of Cs on Pt(1 1 1) surfaces and its reactivity toward oxygen and iodine for coverages θCs?0.15 is reported. These surfaces show unusual “anomalous” behavior compared to higher coverage surfaces. Similar behavior of K on Pt(1 1 1) was previously suggested to involve incorporation of K into the Pt lattice. Despite the larger size of Cs, similar behavior is reported here. Anomalous adsorption is found for coverages lower than 0.15 ML, at which point there is a change in the slope of the work function. Thermal Desorption Spectroscopy (TDS) shows a high-temperature Cs peak at 1135 K, which involves desorption of Cs+ from the surface.The anomalous Cs surfaces and their coadsorption with oxygen and iodine are characterized by Auger Electron Spectroscopy (AES), TDS and Low Electron Energy Diffraction (LEED). Iodine adsorption to saturation on Pt(1 1 1)(anom)-Cs give rise to a sharp LEED pattern and a distinctive work function increase. Adsorbed iodine interacts strongly with the Cs and weakens the Cs-Pt bond, leading to desorption of CsxIy clusters at 560 K. Anomalous Cs increases the oxygen coverage over the coverage of 0.25 ML found on clean Pt. However, the Cs-Pt bond is not significantly affected by coadsorbed oxygen, and when oxygen is desorbed the anomalous cesium remains on the surface.  相似文献   

13.
J. Wang  E.I. Altman 《Surface science》2007,601(16):3497-3505
The oxidation of Pd(1 0 0) by an oxygen plasma was characterized using X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS), low energy ion scattering spectroscopy (ISS), temperature programmed desorption (TPD), and low energy electron diffraction (LEED). The oxygen uptake followed a typical parabolic profile with oxygen coverages reaching 32 ML after 1 h in the plasma; a factor of 40 higher than could be achieved by dosing molecular oxidants in ultra high vacuum. Even after adsorbing 32 ML of oxygen, XPS revealed both metallic Pd and PdO in the surface region. The R27o LEED pattern previously attributed to a surface oxide monolayer, slowly attenuated with oxygen coverage indicating that the PdO formed poorly ordered three dimensional clusters that slowly covered the ordered surface oxide. While XPS revealed the formation of bulk PdO, only small changes in the ISS spectra were observed once the surface oxide layer was completed. The leading edges of the O2 TPD curves showed only small shifts with increasing oxygen coverage that could be explained in terms of the lower thermodynamic stability of small oxide clusters. The desorption curves, however, could not be adequately described as simple zero order decomposition of PdO. There has been an ongoing debate in the literature about the relative catalytic activities of PdO and oxygen phases on Pd, the results indicate that any differences in the reactivity between bulk PdO and surface oxides are not associated with differences in the density of exposed Pd atoms or the decomposition kinetics of these two phases.  相似文献   

14.
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   

15.
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   

16.
The angular distribution of desorbing N2 was studied in the decomposition of N2O(a) on Rh(1 0 0) at 60-140 K by means of angle-resolved temperature-programmed desorption. N2 desorption shows two peaks at around 80 K and 110 K. At low N2O coverage, the former collimates far from the surface normal toward the [0 0 1] direction, whereas at high coverage, the desorption sharply collimates along the surface normal. The adsorption form of N2O and its dissociation were also examined by DFT-GGA calculations. Dissociating N2O is proposed to be lying along the [0 0 1] direction at low coverage and to change to an upright form bonding through the terminal oxygen at high coverage.  相似文献   

17.
Pt/Pd anode catalysts for direct formic acid polymer electrolyte membrane fuel cells outperform both Pt and Pd in steady-state electrooxidation trials. Temperature-programmed desorption (TPD) experiments in ultra-high vacuum (UHV) were performed with 1 L formic acid on clean Pt(1 1 0), 0.6 monolayers Pd/Pt(1 1 0), and multilayer Pd/Pt(1 1 0) to gain a better understanding of the effect of Pd additions to a Pt catalyst. Both dehydration and dehydrogenation of formic acid occur on all three surfaces. As Pd coverage increases, the activation barrier for formate decomposition to CO2 decreases, but the effect does not explain the unusual activity of Pt/Pd in the electrochemical environment.  相似文献   

18.
The oxidation of the Pd(1 1 1) surface was studied by in situ XPS during heating and cooling in 3 × 10−3 mbar O2. A number of adsorbed/dissolved oxygen species were identified by in situ XPS, such as the two dimensional surface oxide (Pd5O4), the supersaturated Oads layer, dissolved oxygen and the R 12.2° surface structure.Exposure of the Pd(1 1 1) single crystal to 3 × 10−3 mbar O2 at 425 K led to formation of the 2D oxide phase, which was in equilibrium with a supersaturated Oads layer. The supersaturated Oads layer was characterized by the O 1s core level peak at 530.37 eV. The 2D oxide, Pd5O4, was characterized by two O 1s components at 528.92 eV and 529.52 eV and by two oxygen-induced Pd 3d5/2 components at 335.5 eV and 336.24 eV. During heating in 3 × 10−3 mbar O2 the supersaturated Oads layer disappeared whereas the fraction of the surface covered with the 2D oxide grew. The surface was completely covered with the 2D oxide between 600 K and 655 K. Depth profiling by photon energy variation confirmed the surface nature of the 2D oxide. The 2D oxide decomposed completely above 717 K. Diffusion of oxygen in the palladium bulk occurred at these temperatures. A substantial oxygen signal assigned to the dissolved species was detected even at 923 K. The dissolved oxygen was characterised by the O 1s core level peak at 528.98 eV. The “bulk” nature of the dissolved oxygen species was verified by depth profiling.During cooling in 3 × 10−3 mbar O2, the oxidised Pd2+ species appeared at 788 K whereas the 2D oxide decomposed at 717 K during heating. The surface oxidised states exhibited an inverse hysteresis. The oxidised palladium state observed during cooling was assigned to a new oxide phase, probably the R 12.2° structure.  相似文献   

19.
Adsorption probability measurements (molecular beam scattering) have been conducted to examine the adsorption dynamics (i.e. the gas-surface energy transfer processes) of CO2 adsorption on the Zn-on-Cu(1 1 0) bimetallic system. The results indicate surface alloy formation, which is in agreement with prior studies. Depositing Zn at 300 K on Cu(1 1 0), above the condensation temperature of CO2, leads to a “blocking” of CO2 adsorption sites by Zn which is incorporated in the Cu(1 1 0) surface. This apparent site blocking effect indicates a lowering of the CO2 binding energy on the alloyed surface as compared with the clean Cu(1 1 0) support. The Zn coverage has been calibrated by Auger electron spectroscopy and thermal desorption spectroscopy.  相似文献   

20.
E. Demirci 《Surface science》2009,603(20):3068-3071
The condensation and desorption of nickel tetra-carbonyl (Ni(CO)4) on Cu(1 1 0) has been studied by thermal desorption spectroscopy. A quite unusual evolution of the desorption spectra is observed. First a desorption peak appears at around 140 K, which disappears with increasing coverage and merges into a clearly separated new desorption peak at around 150 K. This transformation takes place at a coverage of about 10% of a monolayer. It is suggested that the low temperature peak is due to desorption of monomers. With increasing coverage nucleation and growth of multilayer islands starts, from which the desorption energy is higher due to the higher coordination of the carbonyl molecules, compared to that of the monomers. Evaluation of the multilayer desorption spectra yields a desorption energy of 57.9 kJ/mol (0.60 eV) and an unusually high frequency factor of 1.6 × 1019 s−1.  相似文献   

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