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1.
L. Surnev 《Surface science》1981,110(2):458-470
Oxygen adsorption on an alkali metal (a.m.)-covered Ge(111) surface has been studied by means of Auger electron spectroscopy (AES), electron energy loss spectroscopy (ELS), thermal desorption (TD), and work function measurements (WF). It was found that the presence of a.m. results in enhancement of the oxygen adsorption rate. The initial values of the sticking coefficient, S0, are exponential functions of the work function changes caused by the a.m. adsorption. It was shown that no germanium oxide phases are formed on an alkali-covered Ge surface at 300 K. The oxidation rate at high temperatures is limited by the rearrangement processes taking place in the surface GeO layer. The results obtained show that the alkali metal perturbs the GeO bond to a certain extent but no alkali oxide formation was observed at a.m. covertages under investigation.  相似文献   

2.
The adsorption of oxygen on Rh(111) at 100 K has been studied by TDS, AES, and LEED. Oxygen adsorbs in a disordered state at 100 K and orders irreversibly into an apparent (2 × 2) surface structure upon heating to T? 150 K. The kinetics of this ordering process have been measured by monitoring the intensity of the oxygen (1, 12) LEED beam as a function of time with a Faraday cup collector. The kinetic data fit a model in which the rate of ordering of oxygen atoms is proportional to the square of the concentration of disordered species due to the nature of adparticle interactions in building up an island structure. The activation energy for ordering is 13.5 ± 0.5 kcalmole. At higher temperatures, the oxygen undergoes a two-step irreversible disordering (T? 280 K) and dissolution (T?400K) process. Formation of the high temperature disordered state is impeded at high oxygen coverages. Analysis of the oxygen thermal desorption data, assuming second order desorption kinetics, yields values of 56 ± 2 kcal/ mole and 2.5 ± 10?3 cm2 s?1 for the activation energy of desorption and the pre-exponential factor of the desorption rate coefficient, respectively, in the limit of zero coverage. At non-zero coverages the desorption data are complicated by contributions from multiple states. A value for the initial sticking probability of 0.2 was determined from Auger data at 100 K applying a mobile precursor model of adsorption.  相似文献   

3.
F. Solymosi  J. Kiss 《Surface science》1981,108(2):368-380
The adsorption and surface reaction of cyanogen on clean and oxygen covered Cu(111) have been investigated. From electron energy loss measurements, thermal desorption spectroscopy and electron beam effects in Auger spectroscopy, it is proposed that cyanogen adsorbs dissociatively on Cu(111) at 300 K. The activation energy for the desorption was calculated to be 180 kJ/mol. Cyanogen adsorption onto oxygen predosed Cu(111) is inferred to produce the NCO surface species. This interpretation was aided by data of electron energy loss measurements and from HNCO adsorption onto Cu(111) at 300 K. A reaction began in the co-adsorbed layer above 400 K, yielding CO2 and N2.  相似文献   

4.
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   

5.
The adsorption of oxygen on a polycrystalline tungsten surface at ~300 K has been studied by means of electron stimulated desorption (ESD) Although precision gas dosing was not employed, the initial sticking probability for dissociative adsorption appears to be essentially unity, while the variation with coverage suggests that a high degree of order exists and that precursor state kinetics are significant. A most noticeable and reproducible discontinuity in ESD parameters occurs at a fractional coverage θ ~ 0.8 (exposure ~ 1.4 × 1015moleculescm2 incident) which is interpreted as an order-disorder transition within a single (β1) chemisorption state, and results in an increase in the ionic desorption cross-section by a factor of ~ 1.26. A discussion of the adsorption kinetics and the disorder transition is given in terms of current models of dissociative adsorption which include the effects of nearest neighbour lateral interactions.  相似文献   

6.
The co-adsorption of Cu on O2 and a W{100}surface is studied by Auger electron spectroscopy (AES), thermal desorption (TD), low energy electron diffraction (LEED) and by work function change (δø) measurements. It is shown that the presence of Cu on the surface initially decreases sO, the sticking coefficient of O2. For longer oxygen exposures and for higher adsorption temperatures, θO reaches values larger than those on the clean surface for the same O2 exposure. Except at the highest θO values and temperatures, the sticcking coefficient for copper, sCu, is unity and is independent of the oxygen coverage θO in the range studied (0 ? θO ? 2). Co-adsorption at room temperatures does not produce any long range order while co-adsorption at elevated temperature leads to the ordered structures (1 × 1), p(2 × 1), p(2 × 2) and c(2 × 2). The saturation coverage of the two dimensional co-adsorbate at 800 K is given by the relation θCu + 85 θO = 2. The work function is a complicated function of θO and θCu and is determined predominantly by the temperature at which oxygen is adsorbed. At high temperatures the sequence of adsorption has no influence, in contrast to the room temperature behavior.  相似文献   

7.
The adsorption/desorption characteristics of CO, O2, and H2 on the Pt(100)-(5 × 20) surface were examined using flash desorption spectroscopy. Subsequent to adsorption at 300 K, CO desorbed from the (5×20) surface in three peaks with binding energies of 28, 31.6 and 33 kcal gmol?1. These states formed differently from those following adsorption on the Pt(100)-(1 × 1) surface, suggesting structural effects on adsorption. Oxygen could be readily adsorbed on the (5×20) surface at temperatures above 500 K and high O2 fluxes up to coverages of 23 of a monolayer with a net sticking probability to ssaturation of ? 10?3. Oxygen adsorption reconstructed the (5 × 20) surface, and several ordered LEED patterns were observed. Upon heating, oxygen desorbed from the surface in two peaks at 676 and 709 K; the lower temperature peak exhibited atrractive lateral interactions evidenced by autocatalytic desorption kinetics. Hydrogen was also found to reconstruct the (5 × 20) surface to the (1 × 1) structure, provided adsorption was performed at 200 K. For all three species, CO, O2, and H2, the surface returned to the (5 × 20) structure only after the adsorbates were completely desorbed from the surface.  相似文献   

8.
The adsorption of CO on Cu(111) has been studied by Auger electron spectroscopy (AES), low energy electron diffraction (LEED), electron energy loss spectroscopy (EELS), work function measurements and thermal desorption spectroscopy. Two LEED overlayers of CO on Cu(111) have been found: √3 × √3R30° and 73× √73R49.1°. Two different heats of adsorption were derived from thermal desorption spectra: 44.2 and 35.1 kj/mole. The isosteric heat of adsorption evaluated from work function measurements corresponds to the thermal desorption results. Energy losses due to CO adsorption have been found by means of EELS at 4.7, 7.7, and 13.8 eV.  相似文献   

9.
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   

10.
The adsorption of benzene and naphthalene on the Rh(111) single-crystal surface has been studied by low-energy electron diffraction (LEED), Auger electron spectroscopy (AES) and thermal desorption spectroscopy (TDS). Both benzene and naphthalene form two different ordered surface structures separated by temperature-induced phase transitions: benzene transforms from a (3113) structure, which can also be labelled c(23 × 4)rect, to a (3 × 3) structure in the range of 363–395 K, while naphthalene transforms from a (33 × 33)R30° structure to a (3 × 3) structure in the range 398–423 K. Increasing the temperature further, these structures are found to disorder at about 393 K for benzene and about 448 K for naphthalene. Then, a first H2 desorption peak appears at about 413 K for benzene and 578 K for naphthalene and is interpreted as due to the occurrence of molecular dissociation. All these phase transitions are irreversible. The ordered structures are interpreted as due to flat-lying or nearly flat-lying intact molecules on the rhodium surface, and they are compared with similar structures found on other metal surfaces. Structural models and phase transition mechanisms are proposed.  相似文献   

11.
Overlayers formed by the adsorption of Ni(CO)4 in CO on the Ni(111) surface at 100 K were characterized using high resolution electron energy loss spectroscopy and thermal desorption spectroscopy. At temperatures below 135 K, molecular nickel carbonyl adsorbs on the CO saturated Ni(111) surface as suggested by several observations. Vibrational transitions characteristic of molecular Ni(CO)4 are dominant. The energy dependence of both the elastic and inelastic electron scattering cross sections are dramatically altered by Ni(CO)4 adsorption. All of the mass spectrometer ionization fragments typical of molecular Ni(CO)4 are observed in the narrow thermal desorption peak at 150 K. The inelastic scattering cross sections for both adsorbed nickel carbonyl and adsorbed CO on the Ni(111) surface suggest that a nonresonant dipole scattering mechanism is dominant.  相似文献   

12.
The adsorption and desorption of oxygen on stepped tungsten surfaces with orientations close to the (110) orientation and steps parallel to the most densely packed crystal direction ([111]) is studied with low energy electron diffraction, Auger electron spectroscopy, work function measurements and thermal desorption spectroscopy. With increasing deviation from the (110) orientation, an increasing preference for the formation of the p(2 × 1) domain with the densely packed direction parallel to the steps is noted. The adsorption kinetics does not differ markedly from that on the flat (110) surface, however the desorption behaviour at low coverages (θ < 0.3) is quite different. The results are interpreted in terms of the dissociation of a mobile precursor at terrace and step sites, the competition between the two domains during their growth and a step-induced premature transition to the complex structure observed on flat (110) surfaces at θ ? 8. The steps are believed to play also a significant role in desorption.  相似文献   

13.
Y.C. Cheng 《Surface science》1973,40(2):433-438
The adsorption of oxygen on clean cleaved (111) silicon surfaces has been investigated by high resolution electron spectroscopy (HRES), Auger electron spectroscopy (AES) and ellipsometry. Localized vibrations (h?ω = 94, 130 and 175 meV) which are related to the binding state band of oxygen are identified with HRES. AES measures the concentration of adsorbed atoms basically independent of their binding state while ellipsometry refers additionally to the optical properties of the adsorbed layer. The same adsorption kinetics was found with the three methods. Oxygen therefore adsorbs in a single likely molecular state. The sticking coefficient S increases exponentially with the surface step concentration. S is also enhanced by the presence of nude ion gauges. Depending on these parameters sticking coefficients between 2 × 10?4 and 10?1 have been obtained. This result might contribute to an explanation of the large differences in earlier works.  相似文献   

14.
Oxygen adsorption and desorption were characterized on the kinked Pt(321) surface using high resolution electron energy loss spectroscopy, thermal desorption spectroscopy and Auger electron spectroscopy. Some dissociation of molecular oxygen occurs even at 100 K on the (321) surface indicating that the activation barrier for dissociation is smaller on the Pt(321) surface than on the Pt(111) surface. Molecular oxygen can be adsorbed at 100 K but only in the presence of some adsorbed atomic oxygen. The dominance of the v(OO) molecular oxygen stretching mode in the 810 to 880 cm?1 range indicates that the molecular oxygen adsorbs as a peroxo-like species with the OO axis parallel or nearly parallel to the surface, as observed previously on the Pt(111) surface [Gland et al., Surface Sci. 95 (1980) 587]. The existence of at least two types of peroxo-like molecular oxygen is suggested by both the unusual breadth of the v(OO) stretching mode and breadth of the molecular oxygen desorption peak. Atomic oxygen is adsorbed more strongly on the rough step sites than on the smooth (111) terraces, as indicated by the increased thermal stability of atomic oxygen adsorbed along the rough step sites. The two forms of adsorbed atomic oxygen can be easily distinguished by vibrational spectroscopy since oxygen adsorbed along the rough step sites causes a v(PtO) stretching mode at 560 cm?1, while the v(PtO) stretching mode for atomic oxygen adsorbed on the (111) terraces appears at 490 cm?1, a value typical of the (111) surface. Two desorption peaks are observed during atomic oxygen recombination and desorption from the Pt(321) surface. These desorption peaks do not correlate with the presence of the two types of adsorbed atomic oxygen. Rather, the first order low temperature peak is a result of the fact that about three times more atomic oxygen can be adsorbed on the Pt(321) surface than on the Pt(111) surface (where only a second order peak is observed). The heat of desorption for atomic oxygen decreases from about 290kJ/mol (70 kcal/mol) to about 196 kJ/mol (47 kcal/mol) with increasing coverage. Preliminary results concerning adsorption of molecular oxygen from the gas phase in an excited state are also briefly discussed.  相似文献   

15.
The adsorption of Te on a W(100) surface is studied by thermal desorption spectroscopy (TDS), Auger electron spectroscopy (AES), low energy electron diffraction (LEED) and work function change (Δ?) measurements. Three distinct binding states are observed in the first monolayer corresponding the coverages from 0 to 12 monolayers (ML), 12 to 23 ML and23 to 1 ML. Within each state a coverage dependence of the desorption parameters is found. The three binding states are discussed in terms of heterogeneity induced by lateral interactions and in terms of inherently different adsorption sites.  相似文献   

16.
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   

17.
Oxygen adsorption and desorption were characterized on the kinked Pt(321) surface using high resolution electron energy loss spectroscopy and thermal desorption spectroscopy. Molecular oxygen adsorbs mainly as a peroxo-like species at 100K with a heat of desorption of about 22 kJ/mol. Some of the molecular oxygen also adsorbs dissociatively at 100K. Atomic oxygen is adsorbed in three states. One state is due to adsorption on the terraces and another state is due to adsorption along the rough step sites. The heat of desorption of both of these states approximately equal and decreases from 290 kJ/mol to 195kJ/mol with increasing coverage. Atomic oxygen is also observed to adsorb in another state which is interpreted as adsorption at an on-top site.  相似文献   

18.
The co-adsorption of oxygen and hydrogen on Rh(111) at temperatures below 140 K has been studied by thermal desorption mass spectrometry, Auger electron spectroscopy, and lowenergy electron diffraction. The co-adsorption phenomena observed were dependent upon the sequence of adsorption in preparing the co-adsorbed overlayer. It has been found that oxygen extensively blocks sites for subsequent hydrogen adsorption and that the interaction splits the hydrogen thermal desorption into two states. The capacity of the oxygenated Rh(111) surface for hydrogen adsorption is very sensitive to the structure of the oxygen overlayer, with a disordered oxygen layer exhibiting the lowest capacity for hydrogen chemisorption. Studies with hydrogen pre-adsorption indicate that a hydrogen layer suppresses completely the formation of ordered oxygen superstructures as well as O2 desorption above 800 K. This occurs with only a 20% reduction in total oxygen coverage as measured by Auger spectroscopy.  相似文献   

19.
The adsorption of oxygen on the Pt(S)-[12(111) × (111) surface has been studied by Auger electron spectroscopy, low energy electron diffraction and thermal desorption spectroscopy. Two types of adsorbed oxygen have been identified by thermal desorption spectroscopy and low energy electron diffraction: (a) atoms adsorbed on step sites; (b) atoms adsorbed on terrace sites. The kinetics of adsorption into these two states can be modeled by considering sequential filling of the two adsorbed atomic states from a mobile adsorbed molecular precursor state. Adsorption on the step sites occurs more rapidly than adsorption onto the terraces. The sticking coefficient for oxygen adsorption is initially 0.4 on the step sites and drops when the step sites are saturated. The heat of desorption from the step site (45 ± 4 kcal/mole) is about 15% larger than the heat of desorption from the terraces.  相似文献   

20.
The ESDIAD method (electron stimulated desorption ion angular distributions) has been combined with LEED (low energy electron diffraction) in a study of the adsorption of NO on Ni(111). For adsorption at 80 K, NO appears to be bonded with its molecular axis perpendicular to the Ni(111) surface at all coverages. Heating the 80 K layer leads to a striking structural change which we interpret as the formation of inclined or bent NO in the range 120 ? T ? 250 K. Upon adsorption at 150 K, only the bent form of NO is present at low coverages; at higher coverages at 150 K, the perpendicular form appears, in agreement with recent electron energy loss spectroscopy (EELS) data of Lehwald, Yates, and Ibach. When NO is coadsorbed with p(2 × 2) oxygen, the perpendicular form of NO dominates at all coverages and temperatures studied. Dissociated NO adsorbed at steps and defect sites on Ni(111) produces a welldefined hexagonal ESDIAD pattern.  相似文献   

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