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1.
The interaction of NO with CO and with H2 on Pt(100) was studied by temperature programmed desorption (TPD), isothermal desorption mass spectrometry, and low energy electron diffraction (LEED), TPD of NO and CO coadsorbed at 120 K yields almost complete reaction with both N2 and CO2 products desorbing as sharp, simultaneous peaks at ≈ 410 K. with full widths at half maximum as narrow as 3 K. Isothermal desorption mass spectrometry yields N2 and CO2 rates that exhibit a maximum with time. Both experiments indicate that the reaction mechanism is autocatalytic. Annealing NO-CO adlayers formed at 120 K to temperatures above 300 K causes the subsequent N2 and CO2 TPD peaks to broaden.'TPD of NO coadsorbed with H2 yields sharp N2 and H2O product peaks that closely resemble the N2 and CO2 peaks observed in the NO + CO reaction. LEED experiments during TPD and isothermal desorption showed that the (1 × 1) → hex substrate phase transformation sometimes accompanies desorption of N2 and CO2. The TPD and isothermal desorption results can be fit by two simple models: chemical autocatalysis, in which an intermediate chemical species participates in a “chain propagation” reaction, and structural autocatalysis, which involves the formation of a reactive intermediate structure involving Pt atom displacements.  相似文献   

2.
Temperature-programmed desorption (TPD) and X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS) have been employed to study the adsorption and photon-induced decomposition of Mo(CO)6. Mo(CO)6 adsorbs molecularly on a Pt(1 1 1) surface with weak interaction at 100 K and desorbs intact at 210 K without undergoing thermal decomposition. Adsorbed Mo(CO)6 undergoes decarbonylation to form surface Mo(CO)x (x ? 5) under irradiation of ultraviolet light. The Mo(CO)x species can release further CO ligands to form Mo adatoms with CO desorption at 285 K. In addition, a fraction of the released CO ligands transfers onto the Pt surface and subsequently desorbs at 350-550 K. The resulting Mo layer deposited on the Pt surface is nearly free of contamination by C and O. The deposited Mo adatoms can diffuse into the bulk Pt at temperatures above 1070 K.  相似文献   

3.
The adsorption and reaction of methyl nitrite (CH3ONO, CD3ONO) on Pt(111) was studied using HREELS, UPS, TPD, AES, and LEED. Adsorption of methyl nitrite on Pt(111) at 105 K forms a chemisorbed monolayer with a coverage of 0.25 ML, a physisorbed second layer with the same coverage that desorbs at 134 K, and a condensed multilayer that desorbs at 117 K. The Pt(111) surface is very reactive towards chemisorbed methyl nitrite; adsorption in the monolayer is completely irreversible. CH3ONO dissociates to form NO and an intermediate which subsequently decomposes to yield CO and H2 at low coverages and methanol for CH3ONO coverages above one-half monolayer. We propose that a methoxy intermediate is formed. At least some C–O bond breaking occurs during decomposition to leave carbon on the surface after TPD. UPS and HREELS show that some methyl nitrite decomposition occurs below 110 K and all of the methyl nitrite in the monolayer is decomposed by 165 K. Intermediates from methyl nitrite decomposition are also relatively unstable on the Pt(111) surface since coadsorbed NO, CO and H are formed below 225 K.  相似文献   

4.
《Surface science》1994,303(3):L385-L391
The oxygen-exchange reaction between N16O and 18O2 coadsorbed on Pt(111) has been studied by temperature-programmed desorption (TPD). Reaction products of N18O and 18O16O are desorbed from Pt(111) initially saturated with 18O2 at 94 K followed by exposure of N16O. Three distinct desorption peaks are observed in N18O TPD spectra at 145, 310, and 340 K, and two peaks in 18O16O at 155 K and between 600 and 1000 K. In contrast, the exchange reaction is greatly suppressed when oxygen molecules are replaced with oxygen adatoms at three-fold hollow sites of Pt(111). These results strongly suggest that adsorbed oxygen molecules are responsible for the exchange reaction. NO2 or NO3 is postulated as a reaction intermediate. However, since desorption signals corresponding to these species are not detected, the oxygen-exchanged products are not due to the cracking processes of the higher order nitrogen oxides in the mass spectrometer. Thus, the reaction proceeds via the intermediate that is dissociated during the elevation of surface temperature.  相似文献   

5.
Y.-N. Sun  H.-J. Freund 《Surface science》2009,603(20):3099-10094
We studied CO adsorption on Pt particles deposited on well-ordered Fe3O4(1 1 1) thin films grown on Pt(1 1 1) by temperature programmed desorption (TPD). A highly stepped Pt(1 1 1) surface produced by ion sputtering and annealing at 600 K was studied for comparison. Structural characterization was performed by scanning tunneling microscopy and Auger electron spectroscopy. The TPD spectra revealed that in addition to the desorption peaks at ∼400 and 480 K, assigned to CO adsorbed on Pt(1 1 1) facets and low-coordination sites respectively, the Pt nanoparticles annealed at 600 K exhibit a desorption state at ∼270 K. This state is assigned to initial stages of strong metal support interaction resulting in partial Fe-Pt intermixing. On both Pt/Fe3O4(1 1 1) and stepped Pt(1 1 1) surfaces CO is found to dissociate at 500 K. The results suggest that CO dissociation and carbon accumulation occur on the low-coordinated Pt sites.  相似文献   

6.
In this study we probe the reaction of carbon monoxide with Pd nanoparticles supported on cerium oxide thin films. With the use of soft X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (sXPS), and temperature programmed desorption (TPD) the surface intermediates and pathways leading to reaction products of CO on Pd supported on ceria were investigated. When Pd is supported on the stoichiometric CeO2 surface (Ce+4) only the molecular adsorption of CO on Pd is visible (286.4 eV). All of the CO desorbs below 520 K, however a small amount of O exchange between the CO and the ceria was indicated through the acquisition of labeled 18O from the substrate in the desorbed CO. The Pd nanoparticles are activated on partially reduced CeOx to promote the dissociation of <10% of the CO as indicated by a C-Pd species (284.4 eV) in sXPS. The C recombines with O from the ceria and desorbs between 600 and 700 K. The majority of the CO does not dissociate, however, and the degree of dissociation does not increase with the degree of ceria reduction. This result is in contrast with Rh nanoparticles supported on ceria where the degree of dissociation increased with the degree of ceria reduction and nearly total dissociation was obtained when the ceria was highly reduced.  相似文献   

7.
The adsorption of N2, NH3, NO, and N2O onto clean polycrystalline dysprosium at 300 and 115 K and the changes undergone by the adsorbed species upon heating from 115 K have been investigated using X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS) and Auger electron spectroscopy (AES). At 115 K, N2 adsorbs dissociatively, vielding two peaks in the N 1s region at 396.2 and 398.2 eV corresponding respectively to a nitride and to chemisorbed nitrogen N(a). No peaks corresponding to molecularly adsorbed N2 (BE 400.2 eV [10]) were observed. Upon heating the sample the N(a) is converted into the nitride species, as evidenced by a decrease in the 398.2 eV peak and a corresponding increase in the 396.2 eV peak. At a warm-up temperature of 300 K, the N(a) species accounts for only ~10% of the total nitrogen on the surface. Ammonia adsorbed at 115 K shows three distinct peaks, at 401.7, 399.3 and 396.2 eV, corresponding to molecular, partly dissociated, and completely dissociated (nitride) ammonia. Upon heating multilayer ammonia to 175 K, it desorbs to leave predominantly the peak corresponding to the partly dissociated species. Upon further heating the molecular and partly dissociated ammonia is converted into the nitride species. At 400 K only nitride-type nitrogen remains on the surface. The adsorption of NO and N2O at 115 K is predominantly dissociative. NO has N 1s peaks at 403.1 and 396.3 eV corresponding possibly to molecularly adsorbed NO, and to nitride species. After N2O adsorption there is very little nitrogen on the surface. Adsorption of N2 and NO at 300 K yields only the peak at 396.2 eV, whereas NH3 yields, in addition to this peak, a small intensity (~20%) of the peak at 398.2 eV (partly dissociated ammonia).  相似文献   

8.
Adsorption of NO and O2 on Rh(111) has been studied by TPD and XPS. Both gases adsorb molecularly at 120 K. At low coverages (θNO < 0.3) NO dissociates completely upon heating to form N2 and O2 which have peak desorption temperatures at 710 and 1310 K., respectively. At higher NO coverages NO desorbs at 455 K and a new N2 state obeying first order kinetics appears at 470 K. At saturation, 55% of the adsorbed NO decomposes. Preadsorbed oxygen inhibits NO decomposition and produces new N2 and NO desorption states, both at 400 K. The saturation coverage of NO on Rh(111) is approximately 0.67 of the surface atom density. Oxygen on Rh(111) has two strongly bound states with peak temperatures of 840 and 1125 K with a saturation coverage ratio of 1:2. Desorption parameters for the 1125 peak vary strongly with coverage and, assuming second-order kinetics, yield an activation energy of 85 ± 5 kcalmol and a pre-exponential factor of 2.0 cm2 s?1 in the limit of zero coverage. A molecular state desorbing at 150 K and the 840 K state fill concurrently. The saturation coverage of atomic oxygen on Rh(111) is approximately 0.83 times the surface atom density. The behavior of NO on Rh and Pt low index planes is compared.  相似文献   

9.
Temperature programmed desorption (TPD) of coadsorbed NO and CO on Pt(111) shows that no reaction occurs (less than 2%) up to the desorption temperature of NO. At 100 K, adsorption is competitive, but neither gas displaces the other from the surface. Coadsorbed CO causes the NO desorption temperature to be lowered by as much as 100 K, but NO does not affect the CO desorption temperature. TPD spectra for NO depend on which gas is adsorbed first, indicating that equilibrium between species is not established on the surface during desorption. Electron energy loss spectra show that the vibrational spectrum of each gas is only weakly affected by the other. When NO is adsorbed first, CO does not affect the ratio of bridged and terminal NO but lowers the frequencies of the bridged NO by approximately 50 cm?1 and lowers the intensities of vibrational peaks of both species by a factor of about four. When CO is adsorbed first, the ratio of terminal to bridged NO increases for given coverage of NO, and the frequency of the bridged NO remains at the pure NO value. These results are explained in terms of CO island formation, repulsive interactions between NO and CO, and low adsorbate mobilities.  相似文献   

10.
《Surface science》2003,470(1-2):27-44
Reflection absorption infrared spectroscopy (RAIRS) and temperature programmed desorption (TPD) have been used to investigate the effect of pre-dosed O atoms on the adsorption of NO on Pt{2 1 1} at room temperature. RAIRS experiments show that no new species are formed when NO is adsorbed onto a Pt{2 1 1} surface that has been pre-dosed with oxygen and no species are lost from the spectra, compared to spectra recorded for NO adsorption on the clean Pt{2 1 1} surface. However pre-dosed oxygen atoms do influence the frequency and intensity of several of the observed infrared bands. In stark contrast, pre-dosed O has a large effect on the TPD spectra. In particular N2 and N2O desorption, seen following NO adsorption on the clean Pt{2 1 1} surface, is completely inhibited. This effect has been assigned to the blocking of NO dissociation by the pre-adsorbed O atoms. A new NO desorption peak, not seen for NO adsorption on the clean Pt{2 1 1} surface, is also observed in TPD spectra recorded following NO adsorption on an oxygen pre-dosed Pt{2 1 1} surface.  相似文献   

11.
The thermal stability of CH3NCO adsorbed on Cu{110} and Pt{110} is investigated using HREELS, TPD, and ARUPS. CH3NCO desorbs largely without fragmentation from Cu{110}, but on Pt{110} only about 20% of the adsorbed CH3NCO desorbs intact, with 80% decomposing on the surface at T > 200 K into CO(a), H(a), CHx(a), N(a) and NHy(a) fragments. The kinetics of the surface decomposition were characterised for 220 < T < 300 K by HREELS and the activation energy for CH3NCO decomposition was found to vary strongly as a function of coverage.  相似文献   

12.
Temperature programmed desorption (TPD) and temperature programmed adsorption (TPA) have been used to characterize adsorbate coverages during and after NO decomposition on polycrystalline Pt foils at pressures between 10?4 and 30 Torr. The densities and stoichiometries of tightly bound species were determined after reaction by TPD of NO, N2, and O2 following cooling and pumpdown to <10?8 Torr. For characterization during reaction at pressures up to 10?3 Torr the ribbon was flashed inside a 35 cm3 reaction cell, and desorption and adsorption spectra of all species were recorded. Using digital acquisition of pressures versus time, peaks as small as 10?3 of the background pressure could be analyzed. By flashing to different fixed temperatures, adsorption isobars during reaction were determined. These measurements show that there is a tightly bound stoichiometric layer of N and O (perhaps undissociated) and that the reactive state is weakly bound and appears to be strongly inhibited by molecular oxygen. This model also agrees with reaction rate measurements at these pressures.  相似文献   

13.
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   

14.
At 100 K NO is molecularly adsorbed on Re(0001). Bridge bonded and linear species have been identified by XPS and UPS measurements. Moreover a weakly bonded species reversibly adsorbed at 100 K has been found, but not precisely identified. As the temperature of the surface is increased a complex transformation of the layer occurs: the weakly bonded molecules are probably transformed into a more strongly bonded state and desorb between 100 and 300 K. One part of the linear species desorbs between 300 and 500 K giving the α2 molecular state, the other part dissociates and desorbs between 600 and 700 K giving the β1 nitrogen molecules. In the same temperature range the bridge bonded molecules dissociate into nitrogen and oxygen atoms, but nitrogen desorbs into the gas phase between 700 and 1100 K as β2 and β3 states with a second order process. Oxygen is adsorbed as atoms and desorbs at higher temperature. If adsorption takes place at room temperature, NO is mainly dissociated and nitrogen desorbs as β2 and β3 states with a second order process.  相似文献   

15.
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   

16.
The catalytic reduction of NO in the presence of benzene on the surface of Pt(3 3 2) has been studied using Fourier transform infra red reflection-absorption spectroscopy (FTIR-RAS) and thermal desorption spectroscopy (TDS). IR spectra show that while the presence of benzene molecules at low coverage (e.g., following an exposure of just 0.25 L) promotes NO-Pt interaction, the adsorption of NO on Pt(3 3 2) at higher benzene coverages is suppressed. It is also shown that there are no strong interactions between the adsorbed NO molecules and the benzene itself or benzene-derived hydrocarbons, which can lead to the formation of intermediate species that are essential for N2 production.TDS results show that the adsorbed benzene molecules undergo dehydrogenation accompanied by hydrogen desorption starting at 300 K and achieving a maximum at 394 K. Subsequent dehydrogenation of the benzene-derived hydrocarbons then begins with hydrogen desorption starting at 500 K. N2 desorption from NO adlayers on clean Pt(3 3 2) surface becomes significant at temperatures higher than 400 K, giving rise to a peak at 465 K. This peak corresponds to N2 desorption from NO dissociation on step sites. The presence of benzene promotes N2 desorption, depending on the benzene coverage. When the benzene exposure is 0.25 L, the N2 desorption peak at 459 K is dramatically increased. Increasing benzene coverage also results in the intensification of N2 desorption at ∼410 K. At benzene exposures of 2.4 L, N2 desorption develops as a broad peak with a maximum at ∼439 K.It is concluded that the catalytic reduction of NO by platinum in the presence of benzene proceeds by NO decomposition and subsequent oxygen removal at temperatures lower than 500 K, and NO dissociation is a rate-limiting step. The contribution of benzene to N2 desorption is mainly attributed to providing a source of H, which quickly reacts with NO-derived atomic O, leaving the surface with more vacant sites for further NO dissociation.  相似文献   

17.
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   

18.
The adsorption of NO and CO on platinum (410) is studied by X-ray photoemission spectroscopy (XPS). It is found that the (410) surface shows unusual activity for NO and CO bond breaking. CO is found to adsorb molecularly on Pt (410) at 300 K, but it partially dissociates upon heating to 500 K. NO is found to adsorb dissociatively under all conditions studied. By comparison, the low index faces of platinum and stepped surfaces considered previously give negligible dissociation of CO and negligible dissociation of NO up to 450 K. The (410) surface is also unusual from an orbital symmetry standpoint; in fact, it was predicted to be unusually active for NO and CO bond breaking based on Woodward-Hoffman ideas. The present results show, then, that Woodward-Hoffman (i.e., orbital symmetry conservation) methods could yield valuable insights into the nature of active sites on single crystal catalysts.  相似文献   

19.
The adsorption and reaction of the isomers nitromethane (CH3NO2) and methyl nitrite (CH3ONO) on two ordered Sn/Pt(111) surface alloys were studied using TPD, AES, and LEED. Even though the Sn–O bond is stronger than the Pt–O bond and Sn is more easily oxidized than Pt, alloying with Sn reduces the reactivity of the Pt(111) surface for both of these oxygen-containing molecules. This is because of kinetic limitations due to a weaker chemisorption bond and an increased activation energy for dissociation for these molecules on the alloys compared to Pt(111). Nitromethane only weakly adsorbs on the Sn/Pt(111) surface alloys, shows no thermal reaction during TPD, and undergoes completely reversible adsorption under UHV conditions. Methyl nitrite is a much more reactive molecule due to the weak CH3O–NO bond, and most of the chemisorbed methyl nitrite decomposes below 240 K on the alloy surfaces to produce NO and a methoxy species. Surface methoxy is a stable intermediate until 300 K on the alloys, and then it dehydrogenates to evolve gas phase formaldehyde with high selectivity against complete dehydrogenation to form CO on both alloy surfaces.  相似文献   

20.
L. Álvarez-Falcón  S.J. Alas  L. Vicente 《Physica A》2011,390(23-24):4174-4183
The catalytic reduction of nitric oxide by hydrogen over a Pt surface is studied using a dynamic Monte Carlo (MC) method on a square lattice under low pressure conditions. Using a Langmuir–Hinshelwood reaction mechanism, a simplified model with only four adsorbed species (NO, H, O, and N) is constructed. The effect on the NO dissociation rate, the limiting step in the whole reaction, is inhibited by co-adsorbed NO and H2 molecules and is enhanced both by the presence of empty sites and adsorbed N atoms at nearest neighbors. In these simulations, several experimental parameter values are included, such as: adsorption, desorption and diffusion of the reactants. The phenomenon is studied while varying the temperature over the 300–550 K range. The model reproduces well-observed TPD and TPR experimental results. For the whole NO+H2 reaction, the phenomena of “surface explosion” is observed and can be explained as the result of the abrupt production of N2 due to both the autocatalytic NO decomposition favored by the presence of vacant sites and the development of inhomogeneous fluctuations. MA simulations also allow a visualization of the spatial development of the surface explosion as heating proceeds.  相似文献   

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