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1.
The local adsorption geometry of CO adsorbed in different states on Ni(1 0 0) and on Ni(1 0 0) precovered with atomic hydrogen has been determined by C 1s (and O 1s) scanned-energy mode photoelectron diffraction, using the photoelectron binding energy changes to characterise the different states. The results confirm previous spectroscopic assignments of local atop and bridge sites both with and without coadsorbed hydrogen. The measured Ni–C bondlengths for the Ni(1 0 0)/CO states show an increase of 0.16 ± 0.04 Å in going from atop to bridge sites, while comparison with similar results for Ni(1 1 1)/CO for threefold coordinated adsorption sites show a further lengthening of the bond by 0.05 ± 0.04 Å. These changes in the Ni–CO chemisorption bondlength with bond order (for approximately constant adsorption energy) are consistent with the standard Pauling rules. However, comparison of CO adsorbed in the atop geometry with and without coadsorbed hydrogen shows that the coadsorption increases the Ni–C bondlength by only 0.06 ± 0.04 Å, despite the decrease in adsorption energy of a factor of 2 or more. This result is also reproduced by density functional theory slab calculations. The results of both the experiments and the density functional theory calculations show that CO adsorption onto the Ni(1 0 0)/H surface is accompanied by significant structural modification; the low desorption energy may then be attributed to the energy cost of this restructuring rather than weak local bonding.  相似文献   

2.
We employ spin-polarized periodic density functional theory (DFT) to characterize CO adsorption and dissociation on the Fe(1 1 0) surface. We investigate the site preference for CO on Fe(1 1 0) at θCO = 0.25 and 0.5 monolayer (ML), for different functional forms of the generalized gradient approximation (GGA) to electron exchange and correlation within DFT. At 0.25 ML, we predict the existence of a new ordered structure comparable in stability to one proposed previously. At 0.5 ML, we confirm the preference of a distorted on-top adsorption configuration suggested by experiment. The calculated heats of adsorption, CO stretching frequencies, and work function changes agree well with experiment. When dissociating from the on-top site, we predict that CO first moves off the on-top site and then goes through a lying-down transition state with a barrier of 1.52 eV. Diffusion of CO on Fe(1 1 0) from the on-top site to the long-bridge site is predicted to have a very small barrier of 0.1 eV. Dissociation of CO from the long-bridge site goes through the same transition state as from the on-top site, but the former has a slightly lower barrier. After dissociation, O atoms remain on the surface while C atoms are embedded into Fe(1 1 0), indicating C atoms may readily diffuse into Fe(1 1 0).  相似文献   

3.
A detailed study of the interaction of hydrogen and carbon monoxide with two different Rh(1 1 1)/V surface alloys (1/3 monolayer of V in the second atomic layer or 1/3 monolayer of V in form of islands on the surface) is presented in comparison to the clean Rh(1 1 1) surface. For hydrogen a decrease in the sticking coefficient is found for both alloy surfaces. The sticking coefficient of H2 as a function of the translational energy is similar to the Rh(1 1 1) surface, showing a direct activated adsorption mechanism. For low translational energies hydrogen adsorption is dominated by dynamical steering on Rh(1 1 1) and by a precursor mechanism on the Rh(1 1 1)/V subsurface alloy. The H2 TPD desorption peaks are shifted to lower temperatures on the alloy surfaces, caused by the downshift of the metal d-band due to V alloying. On all three surfaces the saturation coverage of hydrogen was measured, giving 1.2, 1.0 and 0.8 monolayer for Rh(1 1 1), the Rh(1 1 1)/V subsurface alloy and for the Rh(1 1 1)/V islands, respectively. For CO the sticking coefficients and the saturation coverages are basically the same on the Rh(1 1 1) and the alloy surfaces. There is an extrinsic precursor on the ordered CO (√3×√3) phase on the Rh(1 1 1) surface, but there is no evidence for such a precursor on the Rh(1 1 1)/V subsurface alloy. On the Rh(1 1 1)/V islands surface, the extrinsic precursor exists on the Rh(1 1 1) surface between the V islands. Apparently this precursor is only stable on the ordered CO layer on Rh(1 1 1).  相似文献   

4.
We have used the ab initio cluster model approach to study the dependence of the CO stretching frequency on CO surface coverage. We have also investigated the relative importance of the various factors that can affect the position of the CO stretching band as coverage increases. Two effects can change the CO stretching frequency: the adsorbate–adsorbate dipole coupling, which is a purely physical effect, and the changes in the 2π* CO molecular orbitals, due to the different chemical environment at higher coverages. From our vibrational analysis, we conclude that CO–CO dipole coupling is the main cause of the upward shift of the CO stretching band when the CO coverage is increased. The population of the 2π* CO molecular orbitals does not change at any coverage within the region considered. We have also estimated the 12CO–13CO dipole coupling, which previous studies have assumed to be weak. Our results demonstrate that the 12CO–13CO dipole coupling is indeed weak compared with the 12CO–12CO dipole coupling. At a CO surface coverage of 0.5 monolayers (ML), we have calculated a band shift of 40 cm−1 to higher frequency. However, we should point out that when one 12CO molecule is surrounded by a 13CO environment, the 12CO stretching band shifts 10 cm−1 upwards. We have also computed the heat of adsorption of CO on Pt{100}-(1×1) as a function of CO coverage. The initial heat of adsorption is calculated to be about 192 kJ mol−1 and then drops to 180 kJ mol−1 at 0.5 ML. These results agree quite well with recent calorimetric measurements. Besides that, we have estimated that the CO–CO interaction energy at 0.5 ML is repulsive and has a value of 5 kJ mol−1.  相似文献   

5.
CO adsorption on Cu(1 1 1) and Cu(0 0 1) surfaces has been studied within ab initio density functional theory (DFT). The structural, vibrational and thermodynamic properties of the adsorbate–substrate complex have been calculated. Calculations within the generalized gradient approximation (GGA) predict adsorption in the threefold hollow on Cu(1 1 1) and in the bridge-site on Cu(0 0 1), instead of on-top as found experimentally. It is demonstrated that the correct site preference is achieved if the underestimation of the HOMO–LUMO gap of CO characteristic for DFT is corrected by applying a molecular DFT + U approach. The DFT + U approach also produces good agreement with the experimentally measured adsorption energies, while introducing only small changes in the calculated geometrical and vibrational properties further improving agreement with experiment which is fair already at the GGA level.  相似文献   

6.
The adsorption of CO and the reaction of CO with pre-adsorbed oxygen at room temperature has been studied on the (2 × 1)ORh(1 1 1) surface and on vanadium oxideRh(1 1 1) “inverse model catalyst” surfaces using scanning tunnelling microscopy (STM) and core-level photoemission with synchrotron radiation. Two types of structurally well-defined model catalyst V3O9Rh(1 1 1) surfaces have been prepared, which consist of large (mean size of 50 nm, type I model catalyst) and small (mean size <15 nm, type II model catalyst) two-dimensional oxide islands and bare Rh areas in between; the latter are covered by chemisorbed oxygen. Adsorption of CO on the oxygen pre-covered (2 × 1)ORh(1 1 1) surface leads to fast CO uptake in on-top sites and to the removal of half (0.25 ML) of the initial oxygen coverage by an oxidation clean-off reaction and as a result to the formation of a coadsorbed (2 × 2)O + CO phase. Further removal of the adsorbed O with CO is kinetically hindered at room temperature. A similar kinetic behaviour has been found also for the CO adsorption and oxidation reaction on the type I “inverse model catalyst” surface. In contrast, on the type II inverse catalyst surface, containing small V-oxide islands, the rate of removal of the chemisorbed oxygen is significantly enhanced. In addition, a reduction of the V-oxide islands at their perimeter by CO has been observed, which is suggested to be the reason for the promotion of the CO oxidation reaction near the metal-oxide phase boundary.  相似文献   

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

8.
The morphology of electrochemically deposited Pd films on the Pt(0 0 1) electrode surface has been examined through the combination of cyclic voltammetry (CV) and in situ surface X-ray scattering (SXS). Analysis of SXS measurements has indicated that the Pd grows via pseudomorphic island formation, with the partial occupation of successive layers occurring at a first layer occupation of 0.8 ML. Further Pd deposition sees the formation of larger islands built onto the now complete monolayer, characteristic of pseudomorphic Stranski–Krastanov (SK) growth. In the HUPD potential region the effect of CO on the surface expansion of the multilayer Pd film is negligible. In the hydrogen evolution region, however, the effect of the adsorption of CO has been shown to produce surface normal expansion and in-plane disorder of the Pd film. It is suggested that hydrogen permeation into the Pd film is enhanced on the CO-poisoned surface.  相似文献   

9.
Adsorption of CO and coadsorption of O and CO on Pt3Sn(1 1 1) was studied using periodic DFT calculations. Calculations were performed on Pt(1 1 1) by using the same set of parameters and their results were used as reference basis. The calculations showed that the most stable configuration with the minimum energy for coadsorption of CO and O is CO adsorbed atop Pt and O adsorbed on fcc Pt2Sn hollow site and that the decrease in the adsorption strength of the system at a total surface coverage of 0.5 ML is by 0.063 eV as a result of coadsorption, with respect to the adsorption of one species individually. Results show that the interaction between the adsorbed CO and O is short range on PtSn alloy, contrary to that on pure Pt, and this is mainly related to stronger Sn–O bonds compared to Pt–O bonds which eventually reduce the surface strain at the coadsorption structure. There is a pronounced effect of total surface concentration on the adsorption energy of coadsorbed species; the adsorption strength is not directly proportional to the surface coverage but is also related to the distribution of the coadsorbed species on the surface.  相似文献   

10.
We have carried out first-principles calculation of Mg(0 0 0 1) free-standing thin films to study the oscillatory quantum size effect exhibited in the surface energy, work function, interlayer relaxation, and adsorption energy of the atomic hydrogen adsorbate. The quantum well states have been shown. The calculated energetics and interlayer relaxation of clean and H-adsorbed Mg films are clearly featured by quantum oscillations as a function of the thickness of the film, with oscillation period of about eight monolayers, consistent with recent experiments. The calculated quantum size effect in H adsorption can be verified by observing the dependence of H coverage on the thickness of Mg(0 0 0 1) thin films gown on Si(1 1 1) or W(1 1 0) substrate which has been experimentally accessible.  相似文献   

11.
Like other close-packed noble metal surfaces, Ag(1 1 1) exhibits an occupied Shockley-type surface state that is believed to influence the adsorption of atoms and molecules. Using low-temperature scanning tunneling microscopy, we have directly probed this interaction by investigating the local CO distribution dependent on the Ag(1 1 1) surface state standing wave pattern forming in the neighborhood of strong scattering centers such as step edges or hexagonal holes. A quantitative analysis of the STM data reveals that the CO molecules are not arbitrarily distributed upon adsorption at 5 K; they adsorb preferentially near the minima of the standing wave pattern.  相似文献   

12.
Limited volume electrodes have been used to examine the processes of hydrogen electrosorption by Pd–Pt–Rh alloys under conditions of cyclic voltammetric (CV) experiments. Hydrogen adsorption and hydrogen absorption signals well separated from surface oxides generation and oxides reduction currents are seen on CV curves recorded in the full potential range. The possibility is demonstrated of simultaneous investigations of bulk processes of hydrogen insertion/removal and surface processes of carbon oxides adsorption. Due to different adsorption characteristics towards CO2 exhibited by the alloy components hydrogen adsorption and hydrogen absorption signals can be distinguished. Adsorbed CO2 causes partial blocking of hydrogen adsorbed on Pt and Rh surface atoms. The presence of adsorbed CO2 on the electrode surface does not influence significantly hydrogen insertion into the alloy. CO adsorption results in a strong inhibition of hydrogen adsorption. Hydrogen insertion into the bulk is not totally blocked but proceeds much slower than in the absence of CO adsorbates.  相似文献   

13.
We have performed a theoretical study of pure metal nanoparticles (Pd/Pt/Au) and their interaction with CO molecules and atomic hydrogen, in order to investigate chemisorption effects of relevance to catalysis by nanoparticles. First-principles density-functional local relaxations are used to investigate the effect of CO and H adsorption on six structural motifs. The results of the energetic crossover and structural deformations are analyzed in terms of the interplay between metal-metal interactions (including internal and surface stress) and CO-metal and H-metal interactions. It is found that H adsorption releases surface stress, thus favoring 5-fold symmetry motifs, whereas CO adsorption produces a flattening of the potential energy surface of the metal clusters.  相似文献   

14.
t p  n Pick  Hugues Dreyss 《Surface science》2000,460(1-3):153-161
The semi-empirical self-consistent tight-binding model of ammonia and hydrogen adsorption at Co(0001) and small Co clusters is used to study the chemisorption role in surface magnetism. The adsorbate choice has been suggested by recent experiments. At the Co(0001) surface the atomic magnetization is predicted to diminish locally by 0.26 μB due to an isolated hydrogen atom adsorption; for Co13 clusters the change is somewhat smaller but less localized. At H(1×1)–Co(0001) the magnetization of surface Co atoms drops to 0.88 μB. The hydrogen magnetic moment is very small and couples antiferromagnetically to Co. Ammonia adsorption is found to reduce the Co atom magnetization locally by 0.1 μB or less. We discuss the possibility of adsorbate–metal antiferromagnetic coupling in more detail.  相似文献   

15.
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   

16.
The adsorption sites of coadsorbed K and CO on the Rh(111) surface have been determined using high-resolution core-level spectroscopy, low-energy electron diffraction and site-resolved photoelectron diffraction. For both a (2×2)-2CO–1K and a -6CO–1K structure, we find that the CO molecules occupy threefold hollow sites and the K atoms on-top sites, contrary to the adsorption sites of K (threefold hollow site) and CO (on-top site below 0.5 monolayers) if adsorbed alone on Rh(111). Deposition of K onto a CO precovered surface is found to induce large shifts towards lower binding energy of the C and O 1s core levels (0.7 eV for C 1s and 1.5 eV for O 1s). The major part of these shifts is shown to arise from the K-induced site change of the CO molecules. This finding may be of importance in the interpretation of XPS data of related co-adsorption systems. Finally, it is suggested that the C and O 1s binding energies provide useful fingerprints of the CO adsorption site also for co-adsorption systems.  相似文献   

17.
The coadsorption of CO and hydrogen on an Fe(100) surface was studied by temperature programmed desorption and X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy. It was found that CO adsorption blocked the subsequent dissociative adsorption of H2, although it did not seem to affect the hydrogen binding energy. Preadsorption of hydrogen was observed to reduce the binding energy of CO subsequently adsorbed and to inhibit the dissociation of CO. A new surface species was identified in a coadsorbed layer of CO and hydrogen. This species was evidenced by the formation of a desorption peak for H2 at 475 K when CO was adsorbed subsequent to H2 adsorption.  相似文献   

18.
The adsorption of CO and CO2 on K-predosed Pd{1 1 0} at room temperature has been examined via reflection–absorption infrared spectroscopy (RAIRS). CO2 adsorbs on 0.37 ML K-predosed Pd{1 1 0} with high sticking probability and a reactive chemisorbed intermediate, CO2, is detected in RAIRS at room temperature. Reaction of this species ultimately yields carbonate. The same high K precoverage induces dissociation of CO at low CO exposure. Carbonate is detected at higher CO exposure and is probably produced via stepwise oxidation of molecularly adsorbed CO. In contrast at low K precoverage (0.11 ML), CO remains intact but the C–O bond is considerably weakened with respect to CO chemisorbed on clean Pd{1 1 0}. These findings illustrate a dual promoter mechanism of K in the adsorption and reaction of CO or CO2 at high K coverage. The alkali metal induces dissociation of these molecules and directly participates in the formation of a surface compound, K2CO3.  相似文献   

19.
《Surface science》1986,175(3):L811-L816
The effect of co-adsorption of hydrogen and CO on Ni(110) has been examined with HREELS. In the mixed adlayer at low CO and hydrogen coverage, the spectra indicate that no strong interaction between H(a) and CO(a) occurs. At high hydrogen coverage the surface reconstructs and consequently the adsorption site for the CO is modified. The reconstruction and site modification is reversible and depends on the hydrogen coverage.  相似文献   

20.
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   

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