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1.
The adsorption of CO and O on Ni (111) was studied by low-energy ion scattering (ISS) and low-energy electron diffraction (LEED). For the ordered (√7/2) × (√7/2) R19.1° CO layer ion scattering gives a coverage greater than 12 monolayer, and for the (2 × 2) O layer a coverage of 14 monolayer. The CO is non-dissociatively adsorbed, with the C bound to the Ni. The molecules are oriented parallel to the surface normal. Island formation at lower CO coverages is possible.  相似文献   

2.
In LEED, the thermal behaviors of main and extra spots are generally very similar. Our experiments on Ni(100)+Sc(2×2) reveal in special cases the existence of a very anomalous low temperature thermal behavior of the 1212 extra spot which seems to evidence a diffraction dominantly from the adsorbed layer. This observation might provide the first decisive experimental test to the theoretical analysis of the vibrational properties of adsorbed monolayers.  相似文献   

3.
Adsorption of CO on Ni(111) surfaces was studied by means of LEED, UPS and thermal desorption spectroscopy. On an initially clean surface adsorbed CO forms a √3 × √3R30° structure at θ = 0.33 whose unit cell is continuously compressed with increasing coverage leading to a c4 × 2-structure at θ = 0.5. Beyond this coverage a more weakly bound phase characterized by a √72 × √72R19° LEED pattern is formed which is interpreted with a hexagonal close-packed arrangement (θ = 0.57) where all CO molecules are either in “bridge” or in single-site positions with a mutual distance of 3.3 Å. If CO is adsorbed on a surface precovered by oxygen (exhibiting an O 2 × 2 structure) a partially disordered coadsorbate 2 × 2 structure with θo = θco = 0.25 is formed where the CO adsorption energy is lowered by about 4 kcal/mole due to repulsive interactions. In this case the photoemission spectrum exhibits not a simple superposition of the features arising from the single-component adsorbates (i.e. maxima at 5.5 eV below the Fermi level with Oad, and at 7.8 (5σ + 1π) and 10.6 eV (4σ) with COad, respectively), but the peak derived from the CO 4σ level is shifted by about 0.3 eV towards higher ionization energies.  相似文献   

4.
The chemisorption of nitric oxide on (110) nickel has been investigated by Auger electron spectroscopy, LEED and thermal desorption. The NO adsorbed irreversibly at 300 K and a faint (2 × 3) structure was observed. At 500 K this pattern intensified, the nitrogen Auger signal increased and the oxygen signal decreased. This is interpreted as the dissociation of NO which had been bound via nitrogen to the surface. By measuring the rate of the decomposition as a function of temperature the dissociation energy is calculated at 125 kJ mol?1. At ~860 K nitrogen desorbs. The rate of this desorption has been measured by AES and by quantitative thermal desorption. It is shown that the desorption of N2 is first order and that the binding energy is 213 kJ mol?1. The small increase in desorption temperature with increasing coverage is interpreted as due to an attractive interaction between adsorbed molecules of ~14 kJ mol?1 for a monolayer. The (2 × 3) LEED pattern which persists from 500–800 K is shown to be associated with nitrogen only. The same pattern is obtained on a carbon contaminated crystal from which oxygen has desorbed as CO and CO2. The (2 × 3) pattern has spots split along the (0.1) direction as (m, n3) and (m2, n). This is interpreted as domains of (2 × 3) structures separated by boundaries which give phase differences of 3 and π. The split spots coalesce as the nitrogen starts to desorb. A (2 × 1) pattern due to adsorbed oxygen was then observed to 1100 K when the oxygen dissolved in the crystal leaving the nickel (110) pattern.  相似文献   

5.
6.
Oxygen adsorbed on Pt(111) has been studied by means of temperature programmed thermal desorption spectroscopy (TPDS). high resolution electron energy loss spectroscopy (EELS) and LEED. At about 100 K oxygen is found to be adsorbed in a molecular form with the axis of the molecule parallel to the surface as a peroxo-like species, that is, the OO bond order is about 1. At saturation coverage (θmol= 0.44) a (32×32)R15° diffraction pattern is observed. The sticking probability S at 100 K as a function of coverage passes through a maximum at θ = 0.11 with S = 0.68. The shape of the coverage dependence is characteristic for adsorption in islands. Two coexisting types of adsorbed oxygen molecules with different OO stretching vibrations are distinguished. At higher coverages units with v-OO = 875 cm?1 are dominant. With decreasing oxygen coverages the concentration of a type with v-OO = 700 cm?1 is increased. The dissociation energy of the OO bond in the speices with v-OO = 875 cm?1 is estimated from the frequency shift of the first overtone to be ~ 0.5 eV. When the sample is annealed oxygen partially desorbs at ~ 160K, partially dissociates and orders into a p(2×2) overlayer. Below saturation coverage of molecular oxygen, dissociation takes place already at92 K. Atomically adsorbed oxygen occupies threefold hollow sites, with a fundamental stretching frequency of 480 cm?1. In the non-fundamental spectrum of atomic oxygen the overtone of the E-type vibration is observed, which is “dipole forbidden” as a fundamental in EELS.  相似文献   

7.
A detailed LEED study is reported of the surface phases stabilised by hydrogen chemisorption on W {001}, over the temperature range 170 to 400 K, correlated with absolute determinations of surface coverages and sticking probabilities. The saturation coverage at 300 K is 19(± 3) × 1014 atoms cm?2, corresponding to a surface stoichiometry of WH2, and the initial sticking probability for both H2 and D2 is 0.60 ± 0.03, independent of substrate temperature down to 170 K. Over the range 170 to 300 K six coverage-dependent temperature-independent phases are identified, and the transition coverages determined. As with the clean surface (2 × 2)R45° displacive phase, the c(2 × 2)-H phase is inhibited by the presence of steps and impurities over large distances (~20 Å), again strongly indicative of CDW-PLD mechanisms for the formation of the H-stabilised phases. These phases are significantly more temperature stable than the clean (2 × 2)R45°, the most stable being a c(2 × 2)-H split half-order phase which is formed at domain stoichiometries between WH0.3 and WH0.5. LEED symmetry analysis, the dependence of half-order intensity and half-width on coverage, and I-V spectra indicate that the c(2 × 2)-H phase is a different displacive structure from that determined by Debe and King for the clean (2 × 2)R45°. LEED I-V spectra are consistent with an expansion of the surface-bulk interlayer spacing from 1.48 to 1.51 Å as the hydrogen coverage increases to ~4 × 1014 atoms cm?2. The transition from the split half-order to a streaked half-order phase is found to be correlated with changes in a range of other physical properties previously reported for this system. As the surface stoichiometry increases from WH to WH2 a gradual transition occurs between a phase devoid of long-range order to well-ordered (1 × 1)-H. Displacive structures are proposed for the various phases formed, based on the hypothesis that at any coverage the most stable phase is determined by the gain in stability produced by a combination of chemical bonding to form a local surface complex and electron-phonon coupling to produce a periodic lattice distortion. The sequence of commensurate, incommensurate and disordered structures are consistent with the wealth of data now available for this system. Finally, a simple structural model is suggested for the peak-splitting observed in desorption spectra.  相似文献   

8.
An extensive photoemission and LEED study of K and CO+K on Ru(001) has been carried out. In this paper the LEED and some XPS results together with TPD and HREELS data are presented in terms of adsorption, desorption. and structural properties, and their compatibility is discussed. Potassium forms (2 × 2) and (3 × 3)R30° overlayers below and near monolayer coverage, and multilayer bonding and desorption is similar to that of bulk K. The initial sticking coefficients for CO adsorption on K predosed surfaces are correlated with the initial K structure, and s0 and CO saturation coverages decrease with increasing K coverage. Two well-characterized mixed CO+K layers have been found which are correlated with predosed (2 × 2) K and (3 × 3)R30° K. They have CO to K ratios of 3:2 and 1:1, and lead to LEED patterns with (2 × 2) and (3 × 3) symmetry, respectively. The molecule is believed to be sp2 rehybridized under the influence of coadsorbed K, leading to stronger CO-Ru and weaker C-O bonds as indicated by the TPD and HREELS results, and to stand upright in essentially twofold bridges.  相似文献   

9.
Adlayers of oxygen, carbon, and sulfur on W(211) have been characterized by LEED, AES, TPD, and CO adsorption. Oxygen initially adsorbs on the W(211) surface forming p(2 × 1)O and p(1 × 1)O structures. Atomic oxygen is the only desorption product from these surfaces. This initial adsorption selectively inhibits CO dissociation in the CO(β1) state. Increased oxidation leads to a p(1 × 1)O structure which totally inhibits CO dissociation. Volatile metal oxides desorb from the p(1 × 1)O surface at 1850 K. Oxidation of W(211) at 1200 K leads to reconstruction of the surface and formation of p(1 × n)O LEED patterns, 3 ? n ? 7. The reconstructed surface also inhibits CO dissociation and volatile metal oxides are observed to desorb at 1700 K, as well as at 1850 K. Carburization of the W(211) surface below 1000 K produced no ordered structures. Above 1000 K carburization produces a c(6 × 4)C which is suggested to result from a hexagonal tungsten carbide overlayer. CO dissociation is inhibited on the W(211)?c(6×4)C surface. Sulfur initially orders into a c(2 × 2)S structure on W(211). Increased coverage leads to a c(2×6)S structure and then a complex structure. Adsorbed sulfur reduces CO dissociation on W(211), but even at the highest sulfur coverages CO dissociation was observed. Sulfur was found to desorb as atomic S at 1850 K for sulfur coverages less than 76 monolayers. At higher sulfur coverages the dimer, S2, was observed to desorb at 1700 K in addition to atomic sulfur desorption.  相似文献   

10.
We have studied submonolayer adsorption, at room temperature, of iodine on the (111) faces of silver and copper, using LEED and XPS. In both systems the √3 × √3 LEED pattern appears at ~0.2 monolayer (ML) coverage; no other superlattice pattern was observed. The I 4d52 core electron binding energy in both cases decreases by ~0.15 eV between very dilute coverage and 0.33 ML. The leveling-off of the binding energy for I/Ag(111) for coverages >0.2 ML is shown to be a unique experimental manifestation of an indirect, substrate-mediated adatom-adatom interaction, an attraction of several meV between next-nearest neighbor iodine atoms. The more nearly linear decrease in the I binding energy on Cu(111) is shown to imply a significantly weaker next-nearest neighbor interaction on this surface. The appearance of the √3 × √3 LEED pattern at low coverages on Cu is shown to be consistent with short-range order produced merely by a size effect, that is, by nearest neighbor exclusion. These conclusions are reached with the help of Monte Carlo calculations of a triangular lattice gas.  相似文献   

11.
The chemisorption of CO on Co(0001) and on a polycrystalline specimen has been studied by LEED, Auger spectroscopy, and thermal desorption measurements. Annealing of the polycrystal was found to result in a surface dominated by crystallites of (0001) orientation in the surface plane, along with a few (101̄2) oriented crystallites. CO adsorbs on the clean surface at 300 K with an initial sticking probability of 0.9 and the system follows precursor state kinetics. The saturation coverage under UHV conditions corresponds to a well-ordered (√3 × √3)R30° structure; with PCO>5 × 10-9 a uniform compression of the adlayer takes place and a (√7 × √7)R19.2° structure begins to form. Models are proposed for these two ordered phases which are in agreement with the observed relative coverage data and the appearance of the corresponding desorption spectra. The desorption enthalpy of CO at low coverages is 103 ± 8 kJmol-1, and a fairly sharp fall in this enthalpy occurs for coverages >13. In many respects, the system's behaviour closely resembles that of Ni(111)-CO. Oxygen contamination leads to the appearance of a strongly adsorbed CO state with a desorption enthalpy of ~170 kJmol-1. This is reminiscent of a strongly adsorbed non-dissociated state of CO on Ru(101̄1) which occurs under similar conditions.  相似文献   

12.
H2O adsorption on clean Ni(110) surfaces at T ≦ 150 K leads at coverages below θ ? 0.5 to the formation of chemisorbed water dimers, bound to the Ni substrate via both oxygen atoms. The linear hydrogen bond axis is oriented parallel to the [001] surface directions. With increasing H2O coverage (θ ≧ 0.5), the accumulation of further hydrogen bonded water molecules induces some modification of the dimer configuration, producing at θ ? 1 a two-dimensional hydrogen bonded network with a slightly distorted ice lattice structure and long range order.  相似文献   

13.
Reported are studies by LEED and Auger spectroscopy of silver layers electrodeposited on well-characterized Pt(111) surfaces from aqueous solution. Prior to electrodeposition. the Pt(111) surface was treated with I2 vapor to form the Pt(111) (7 × 7)R19.1°-I superlattice which protected the Pt and Ag surfaces from attack by the electrolyte and residual gases. Electrodeposition of silver occurred in four distinct ranges of electrode potential. Ordered layers having (3 × 3) and (18 × 18) (coincidence lattice) LEED patterns were formed at all coverages from the onset of deposition to the highest coverages studied, about twenty equivalent atomic layers. Formation of ordered Ag layers has therefore been demonstrated, at least for deposits of limited thickness. Auger spectra revealed that for deposits of a few atomic layers. The iodine layer remained attached to the surface during multiple cycles of electrodeposition and dissolution of silver from iodine-free solution. Each peak of the voltammetric current-potential scan produced a change in the LEED pattern.  相似文献   

14.
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   

15.
The adsorption of alkali metals on transition metals can produce several technologically important effects, but only limited results have been reported on the geometrical structure of such adlayers, especially for adsorption temperatures below 300 K. We have examined the adsorption of Na on Ru(001) as a function of coverage and temperature using LEED to determine the adlayer structure and thermal desorption spectroscopy to characterize binding kinetics and relative Na coverages. The only Na LEED pattern observed following adsorption at 300 K was that of (32 × 32) structure which occurred near saturation of the first layer. However, Na adsorbed at 80 K produces a progression of distinct, ordered LEED patterns with increasing coverage which does not include the (32 × 32) pattern. These patterns result from increasingly compressed, hexagonal arrangements of adsorbate atoms which are uniformly spaced due to mutually repulsive interactions. The order-disorder transition temperature for each structure was also determined by LEED and used to develop a 2D phase diagram for Na on Ru(001). Ordered structures were observed only when Na thermally induced motion was sufficiently limited and the repulsive Na-Na interaction could force the uniform spacing of Na atoms. Thus, low coverage structures only developed where Na mobility was limited by low temperature. High coverage structures were stable to much higher temperatures since motion was inhibited by the high Na density.  相似文献   

16.
A (√2 × √2)R45° surface structure on W {001} produced only by cooling below ~370 K, first reported by Yonehara and Schmidt, has been investigated by LEED, AES, work function change, characteristic loss and low energy Auger fine structure measurements. No significant changes at any energy up to 520 eV occur in the standard Auger spectrum upon cooling to 220 K for as long as 30 min after a flash to >2 500 K. The work function of the (√2 × √2) R45° at 210 K is 20 ± 10 mV below that of the (1 × 1) surface, and a sensitive feature in the fine structure of the N7VV AES transition shows approximately 60% attenuation. Unlike for H2 adsorption, the “surface plasmon” loss peak exhibits little if any measurable attenuation and no measurable shift in energy as the crystal cools to form the (√2 × √2)R45°. The rate of intensity buildup in the 12-order LEED beams is strictly temperature dependent, and significant differences exist between the 12-order LEED spectra produced by cooling and those produced by H2 adsorption. Only 2-fold symmetry was observed in the LEED beam intensities at exactly normal incidence, rather than 4-fold as expected for statistically equal numbers of rotationally equivalent domains. The LEED I-V spectra for 24 fractional order beams and 12 integral order beams, taken over large energy ranges at normal incidence, clearly establish that the beam intensities display 2 mm point group symmetry, and hence a preference of one domain orientation over the other. No beam broadening or splitting effects were apparent, implying only incoherent scattering from the various domains. The half-order beam spectra (±h/2, ±h/2) are identical in relative intensity to the (±h/2, ±h/2) spectra but different in absolute intensity by a constant factor, which can be explained only by domains with p2mg space group symmetry rather than just p2mm. Adsorption of H2 onto the cooled (√2 × √2)R45° structure restores the 4-fold symmetry in the LEED beam intensities at normal incidence, giving a c(2 × 2) hydrogen structure, the same as when adsorbing H2 onto the above room temperature (1 × 1) crystal. This strongly supports the observed p2mg symmetry as being a true property of the cooled (√2 × √2)R45° surface structure. These results show that the (1 × 1) → (√2 × √2) R45° transition produced by cooling is a transition involving displacement of surface W atoms, and that it apparently can be characterized as an order-order, second degree, homogeneous nucleation process, which is strongly prohibited by the presence of impurities or defects.  相似文献   

17.
18.
Low Energy Ion Scattering has been used to study the interaction of molecular oxygen with a Cu{110} surface. The amount of adsorbed atomic oxygen was monitored by the 4 keV Ne+¦O reflection signal. In the first adsorption stage (coverage less than half a monolayer) the sticking probability varied proportional to the number of empty adsorption sites: S = S0 (1 ? \?gq). It turned out not to be influenced by the Ne+ bombardment. The initial sticking probability S0 was found to be ≈ 0.24. In this first adsorption stage the oxygen-covered surface is reconstructed according to the “missing row” model, leading to a (2 × 1) LEED pattern.  相似文献   

19.
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   

20.
The well known experimental Si {111} 7 × 7 LEED pattern is shown to exhibit systematic enhancement of diffracted intensity at the 12-order positions, thus revealing the existence of 2 × 1 or 2 × 2 structural components in the 7 × 7 structure with a single domain Si {111} 2 × 1 cleaved structure reveals remarkable similarities. The conclusion is that the fundamental building block of the 7 × 7 structure is a 2 × 1 subunit which closely resembles the unit cell of the cleaved 2 × 1 structure.  相似文献   

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