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1.
Feng Gao 《Surface science》2009,603(8):1126-10202
RuO2(1 1 0) was formed on Ru(0 0 0 1) under oxygen-rich reaction conditions at 550 K and high pressures. This phase was also synthesized using pure O2 and high reaction temperatures. Subsequently the RuO2 was subjected to CO oxidation reaction at stoichiometric and net reducing conditions at near-atmospheric pressures. Both in situ polarization modulation infrared reflection absorption spectroscopy (PM-IRAS) and post-reaction Auger electron spectroscopy (AES) measurements indicate that RuO2 gradually converts to a surface oxide and then to a chemisorbed oxygen phase. Reaction kinetics shows that the chemisorbed oxygen phase has the highest reactivity due to a smaller CO binding energy to this surface. These results also show that a chemisorbed oxygen phase is the thermodynamically stable phase under stoichiometric and reducing reaction conditions. Under net oxidizing conditions, RuO2 displays high reactivity at relatively low temperatures (?450 K). We propose that this high reactivity involves a very reactive surface oxygen species, possibly a weakly bound, atomic oxygen or an active molecular O2 species. RuO2 deactivates gradually under oxidizing reaction conditions. Post-reaction AES measurements reveal that this deactivation is caused by a surface carbonaceous species, most likely carbonate, that dissociates above 500 K.  相似文献   

2.
Max Montano 《Surface science》2006,600(9):1809-1816
A scanning tunneling microscope that can be operated in ultra high vacuum (<10−9 Torr) as well as at high pressures (1 − 103 Torr) has been utilized to study the structures formed by cyclic C6 hydrocarbons adsorbed on a platinum (1 1 1) crystal surface. Catalytic reactions of cyclohexene were also studied in the presence of hydrogen at pressures (up to 200 mTorr) and 300 K-350 K temperature range. Cyclohexane and cyclohexene produced the same adsorbed structure, which is attributed to the partially dehydrogenated π-allyl (C6H9). 1,3-Cyclohexadiene produced structures similar to those produced by benzene. In contrast 1,4-cyclohexadiene forms a structure that we attribute to intact molecular 1,4-cyclohexadiene. During reaction the STM images appear disordered, indicative of rapid diffusion of surface species. Addition of 5 mTorr of CO stops the catalytic activity and forms an ordered structure on the surface.  相似文献   

3.
By means of density functional theory calculations we have investigated the role of adsorbed atomic oxygen and adsorbed OH in the oxidation of ammonia on Pt{1 1 1}. We have investigated the dissociation of NH3,ads, NH2,ads and NHads on Pt{1 1 1} and the oxidation of these species by Oads and OHads. We have done normal mode frequency analysis and work function calculations to characterise reactant, product and transition states. We have determined reaction energies, activation entropies, kinetic parameters and corrected total energies with the zero point energy. We have shown that Oads only activates the dehydrogenation of NH3,ads and that OHads activates the dehydrogenation of all NHx,ads species and have reasoned this difference in activation by a bond order conservation principle. We have pointed out the importance of a zero point energy correction to the reaction energies and barriers. We have compared the calculated vibrational modes of the adsorbates with corresponding experimental EELS data. This has led to a revise of the frequency assignment of ν(Pt-OH2), a revise in the identification of a NH2 species on the Pt{1 1 1} surface after electron bombardment of pre-adsorbed NH3 and the confirmation of an ammonia dimer binding model at the expense of a hollow site occupation by ammonia on the Pt{1 1 1} surface.  相似文献   

4.
In situ electrochemical scanning tunneling microscopy (STM) has been used to examine the structures of benzenethiol adlayers on Au(1 0 0) and Pt(1 0 0) electrodes in 0.1 M HClO4, revealing the formation of well-ordered adlattices of Au(1 0 0)-(√2 × √5) between 0.2 and 0.9 V and Pt(1 0 0)-(√2 × √2)R45° between 0 and 0.5 V (versus reversible hydrogen electrode), respectively. The coverage of Au(1 0 0)-(√2 × √5) is 0.33, which is identical to those observed for upright alkanethiol admolecules on Au(1 1 1). In comparison, the coverage of Pt(1 0 0)-(√2 × √2)R45° - benzenethiol is 0.5, much higher than those of thiol molecules on gold surfaces. This result suggests that benzenethiol admolecules on Pt(1 0 0) could stand even more upright than those on Au(1 0 0). All benzenethiol admolecules were imaged by the STM as protrusions with equal corrugation heights, suggesting identical molecular registries on Au(1 0 0) and Pt(1 0 0) electrodes, respectively. Modulation of the potential of a benzenethiol-coated Au(1 0 0) electrode resulted in irreversible desorption of admolecules at E ? 0.1 V (vs. reversible hydrogen electrode) and oxidation of admolecules at E ? 0.9 V. In contrast, benzenethiol admolecule was not desorbed from Pt(1 0 0) at potentials as negative as the onset of hydrogen evolution. Raising the potential rendered deposition of more benzenethiol molecules before oxidation of admolecules commenced at E > 0.9 V.  相似文献   

5.
A well-defined CeOx/Pt(1 1 1) model catalytic system has been fabricated using the self-assembling of Ce adatoms on a Pt(1 1 1) surface with a subsequent oxidation of the nucleating Ce submonolayer (0.3 ML). The resulting system of the “inverse supported catalyst” type consists of CeOx nanoformations (2D islands of 5-15 nm size and ∼0.3 nm in height) more or less uniformly distributed over the Pt(1 1 1) surface. This CeOx/Pt(1 1 1) system has been tested in the CO oxidation reaction where both the CO2 production rate and the Ce oxidation state were monitored in situ. An enhanced reactivity and a remarkable shift of the bistable region of the reaction towards higher CO pressures were observed when compared to a clean Pt(1 1 1) surface. The CeOx islands exhibit a pronounced redox behaviour that follows the hysteresis cycle of the reaction. The usefulness of such a type of the “inverse model catalyst” for studying the oxygen diffusion supply and the redox behaviour of ceria in the ceria-platinum catalysts is demonstrated.  相似文献   

6.
The adsorption of CO on Pt(1 1 1), (2 × 2) and (√3 × √3)R30° Sn/Pt(1 1 1) surface alloys has been studied using temperature programmed desorption (TPD), low energy electron diffraction (LEED) and infrared reflection adsorption spectroscopy (IRAS). The presence of Sn in the surface layer of Pt(1 1 1) reduces the binding energy of CO by a few kcal/mol. IRAS data show two C-O stretching frequencies, ∼2100 and ∼1860 cm−1, corresponding to atop and bridge bonded species, respectively. Bridge bonded stretching frequencies are only observed for Pt(1 1 1) and (2 × 2) Sn/Pt(1 1 1) alloy surfaces. A slight coverage dependence of the vibrational frequencies is observed for the three surfaces. High pressure IRAS experiments over a broad temperature range show no indication of bridge bonded CO on any of the three surfaces. Direct CO adsorption on Sn sites is not observed over the measured temperature and pressure ranges.  相似文献   

7.
Jooho Kim  Bruce E. Koel 《Surface science》2006,600(19):4622-4632
Nanosized gold particles supported on reducible metal oxides have been reported to show high catalytic activity toward CO oxidation at low temperature. This has generated great scientific and technological interest, and there have been many proposals to explain this unusual activity. One intriguing explanation that can be tested is that of Nørskov and coworkers [Catal. Lett. 64 (2000) 101] who suggested that the “unusually large catalytic activity of highly-dispersed Au particles may in part be due to high step densities on the small particles and/or strain effects due to the mismatch at the Au-support interface”. In particular, their calculations indicated that the Au(2 1 1) stepped surface would be much more reactive towards O2 dissociative adsorption and CO adsorption than the Au(1 1 1) surface. We have now studied the adsorption of O2 and O3 (ozone) on an Au(2 1 1) stepped surface. We find that molecular oxygen (O2) was not activated to dissociate and produce oxygen adatoms on the stepped Au(2 1 1) surface even under high-pressure (700 Torr) conditions with the sample at 300-450 K. Step sites do bind oxygen adatoms more tightly than do terrace sites, and this was probed by using temperature programmed desorption (TPD) of O2 following ozone (O3) exposures to produce oxygen adatoms up to a saturation coverage of θO = 0.90 ML. In the low-coverage regime (θO ? 0.15 ML), the O2 TPD peak at 540 K, which does not shift with coverage, is attributed to oxygen adatoms that are bound at the steps on the Au(2 1 1) surface. At higher coverages, an additional lower temperature desorption peak that shifts from 515 to 530 K at saturation coverage is attributed to oxygen adsorbed on the (1 1 1) terrace sites of the Au(2 1 1) surface. Although the desorption kinetics are likely to be quite complex, a simple Redhead analysis gives an estimate of the desorption activation energy, Ed, for the step-adsorbed oxygen of 34 kcal/mol and that for oxygen at the terraces near saturation coverage of 33 kcal/mol, values that are similar to others reported on Au surfaces. Low Energy Electron Diffraction (LEED) indicates an oxygen-induced step doubling on the Au(2 1 1) surface at low-coverages (θO = 0.08-0.17 ML) and extensive disruption of the 2D ordering at the surface for saturation coverages of oxygen (θO ? 0.9 ML). Overall, our results indicate that unstrained step sites on Au(2 1 1) surfaces of dispersed Au nanoparticles do not account for the novel reactivity of supported Au catalysts for CO oxidation.  相似文献   

8.
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   

9.
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   

10.
The reaction of acetaldehyde with the Pd(1 1 0) surface has been studied using a molecular beam reactor, TPD and LEED. Below 270 K acetaldehyde sticks to the surface with a high initial probability (∼0.8), but no gas phase products evolve. When the reaction is run at >270 K, hydrogen evolves into the gas phase early in the reaction together with methane in a non-steady-state fashion, but above 300 K there is a very efficient steady-state catalytic reaction at the surface; this reaction is the decarbonylation of acetaldehyde to produce methane and carbon monoxide in the gas phase. This behaviour continues up to about 400 K. However, when acetaldehyde is dosed at 423 K, the reaction rate slowly evolves through a maximum to a very low catalytic rate. Upon carrying out reactor experiments at 473 K and above, the reaction mechanism changes to total dehydrogenation, and CO and H2 are produced at high steady-state rate, not withstanding the fact that carbon is continually being deposited onto the surface. This carbon does not appear to affect the reaction, which takes place on a surface with a c(2 × 2)-C layer present, since the extra carbon is lost from the reaction zone by diffusion into the bulk of the crystal.  相似文献   

11.
Adsorption of carbon monoxide on Pd(3 1 1) and (2 1 1) stepped surfaces has been investigated by the extended London-Eyring-Polyani-Sato (LEPS) method constructed using a 5-parameter Morse potential. The calculated results show that there exist common characteristics of CO adsorption on the two surfaces. At low coverage, CO occupies threefold hollow site of the (1 1 1) terrace and is tilted with respect to the surface normal. Among the threefold hollow sites on the (1 1 1) terrace, the nearer the site is to the step, the greater is the influence of the step. The twofold bridge site on the (1 0 0) step is also a stable adsorption site at high coverage. Because of the different lengths of the (1 1 1) terraces, the (3 1 1) and (2 1 1) stepped surfaces have different characteristics. A number of new sites are exposed on the boundary regions, including the fourfold hollow site (H4) of the (3 1 1) surface and the fivefold hollow site (H5) of the (2 1 1) surface. At high coverage, CO resides in the H5 site of the (2 1 1) surface, but the H4 site of the (3 1 1) surface is not a stable adsorption site. This study further shows that the on-top site on the (1 0 0) step of Pd(3 1 1) is a stable adsorption site, but the same type of site on Pd(2 1 1) is not.  相似文献   

12.
The adsorption properties of CO on experimentally verified stepped Pt3Sn(1 0 2) surface were investigated using quantum mechanical calculations. The two possible terminations of Pt3Sn(1 0 2) were generated and on these terminations all types of possible adsorption sites were determined. The adsorption energies and geometries of the CO molecule for all those sites were calculated. The most favorable sites for adsorption were determined as the short bridge site on the terrace of pure-Pt row of the mixed-atom-ending termination, atop site at the step-edge of the pure row of pure-Pt-ending termination and atop site at the step-edge of the pure-Pt row of the mixed-atom-ending termination. The results were compared with those for similar sites on the flat Pt3Sn(1 1 0) surface considering the fact that Pt3Sn(1 0 2) has terraces with (1 1 0) orientation. The LDOS analysis of bare sites clearly shows that there are significant differences between the electronic properties of Pt atoms at stepped Pt3Sn(1 0 2) surface and the electronic properties of Pt atoms at flat (1 1 0) surface, which leads to changes in the CO bonding energies of these Pt atoms. Adsorption on Pt3Sn(1 0 2) surface is in general stronger compared to that on Pt3Sn(1 1 0) surface. The difference in adsorption strength of similar sites on these two surface terminations is a result of stepped structure of Pt3Sn(1 0 2). The local density of states (LDOS) of the adsorbent Pt and C of adsorbed CO was utilized. The LDOS of the surface metal atoms with CO-adsorbed atop and of their bare state were compared to see the effect of CO chemisorption on the electron density distribution of the corresponding Pt atom. The downward shift in energy peak in the LDOS curves as well as changes in the electron densities of the corresponding energy levels indicate the orbital mixing between CO molecular orbitals and metal d-states. The present study showed that the adsorption strength of the sites has a direct relation with their LDOS profiles.  相似文献   

13.
Haibo Zhao 《Surface science》2009,603(23):3355-12149
The influence of hydrogen coadsorption on hydrocarbon chemistry on transition metal surfaces is a key aspect to an improved understanding of catalytic selective hydrogenation. We have investigated the effects of H preadsorption on adsorption and reaction of 1,3-butadiene (H2CCHCHCH2, C4H6) on Pt(1 1 1) surfaces by using temperature-programmed desorption (TPD) and Auger electron spectroscopy (AES). Preadsorbed hydrogen adatoms decrease the amount of 1,3-butadiene chemisorbed on the surface and chemisorption is completely blocked by the hydrogen monolayer (saturation) coverage (θH = 0.92 ML). No hydrogenation products of reactions between coadsorbed H adatoms and 1,3-butadiene were observed to desorb in TPD experiments over the range of θH investigated (θH = 0.6-0.9 ML). This is in strong contrast to the copious evolution of ethane (CH3CH3, C2H6) from coadsorbed hydrogen and ethylene (CH2CH2, C2H4) on Pt(1 1 1). Hydrogen adatoms effectively (in a 1:1 stoichiometry) remove sites from interaction with chemisorbed 1,3-butadiene, but do not affect adjacent sites. The adsorption energy of coadsorbed 1,3-butadiene is not affected by the presence of hydrogen on Pt(1 1 1). The chemisorbed 1,3-butadiene on hydrogen preadsorbed Pt(1 1 1) completely dehydrogenates to H2 and surface carbon upon heating without any molecular desorption detected, which is identical to that observed on clean Pt(1 1 1). In addition to revealing aspects of site blocking that should have broad implications for hydrogen coadsorption with hydrocarbon molecules on transition metal surfaces in general, these results also provide additional basic information on the surface science of selective catalytic hydrogenation of butadiene in butadiene-butene mixtures.  相似文献   

14.
Three typical spinels of general formula MAl2O4 (M = Mg, Co and Zn) have been successfully prepared via a microemulsion method both in the reverse and bicontinuous state. The final solids were characterized by X-ray diffraction followed by Rietveld analysis, N2 adsorption-desorption porosimetry and SEM. Pore connectivity (c) was also calculated with Seaton's method. The analysis of all these properties shown that spinels prepared via reverse microemulsion route have better surface and textural properties than bicontinuous ones. The spinels were tested for NO + CO reaction and reverse spinels shown better catalytic activity than bicontinuous ones while the full sequence of catalytic activity is: ZnAl2O4-r > ZnAl2O4-b > MgAl2O4-r > MgAl2O4-b > CoAl2O4-r > CoAl2O4-b. The Rietveld analysis helped us to give an explanation about the catalytic activity and shown that the configuration of inverse spinel phase is the critical factor for the catalytic behavior of final solids. The reactants NO and CO react in a 2:1 ratio at low temperature but they convert in a 1:1 ratio at high temperatures. From the kinetic analysis the heats of NO adsorption are estimated and are in full agreement with the results of catalytic activity.  相似文献   

15.
The adsorption and dissociation of O2 on CuCl(1 1 1) surface have been systematically studied by the density functional theory (DFT) slab calculations. Different kinds of possible modes of atomic O and molecular O2 adsorbed on CuCl(1 1 1) surface and possible dissociation pathways are identified, and the optimized geometry, adsorption energy, vibrational frequency and Mulliken charge are obtained. The calculated results show that the favorable adsorption occurs at hollow site for O atom, and molecular O2 lying flatly on the surface with one O atom binding with top Cu atom is the most stable adsorption configuration. The O-O stretching vibrational frequencies are significantly red-shifted, and the charges transferred from CuCl to oxygen. Upon O2 adsorption, the oxygen species adsorbed on CuCl(1 1 1) surface mainly shows the characteristic of the superoxo (O2), which primarily contributes to improving the catalytic activity of CuCl, meanwhile, a small quantity of O2 dissociation into atomic O also occur, which need to overcome very large activation barrier. Our results can provide some microscopic information for the catalytic mechanism of DMC synthesis over CuCl catalyst from oxidative carbonylation of methanol.  相似文献   

16.
V2O3(0 0 0 1) films have been grown epitaxially on Au(1 1 1) and W(1 1 0). Under typical UHV conditions these films are terminated by a layer of vanadyl groups as has been shown previously [A.-C. Dupuis, M. Abu Haija, B. Richter, H. Kuhlenbeck, H.-J. Freund, V2O3(0 0 0 1) on Au(1 1 1) and W(1 1 0): growth, termination and electronic structure, Surf. Sci. 539 (2003) 99]. Electron irradiation may remove the oxygen atoms of this layer. H2O adsorption on the vanadyl terminated surface and on the reduced surface has been studied with thermal desorption spectroscopy (TDS), vibrational spectroscopy (IRAS) and electron spectroscopy (XPS) using light from the BESSY II electron storage ring in Berlin. It is shown that water molecules interact only weakly with the vanadyl terminated surface: water is adsorbed molecularly and desorbs below room temperature. On the reduced surface water partially dissociates and forms a layer of hydroxyl groups which may be detected on the surface up to T ∼ 600 K. Below ∼330 K also co-adsorbed molecular water is detected. The water dissociation products desorb as molecular water which means that they recombine before desorption. No sign of surface re-oxidation could be detected after desorption, indicating that the dissociation products desorb completely.  相似文献   

17.
The formic acid and methanol oxidation reaction are studied on Pt(1 1 1) modified by a pseudomorphic Pd monolayer (denoted hereafter as the Pt(1 1 1)-Pd1 ML system) in 0.1 M HClO4 solution. The results are compared to the bare Pt(1 1 1) surface. The nature of adsorbed intermediates (COad) and the electrocatalytic properties (the onset of CO2 formation) were studied by FTIR spectroscopy. The results show that Pd has a unique catalytic activity for HCOOH oxidation, with Pd surface atoms being about four times more active than Pt surface atoms at 0.4 V. FTIR spectra reveal that on Pt atoms adsorbed CO is produced from dehydration of HCOOH, whereas no CO adsorbed on Pd can be detected although a high production rate of CO2 is observed at low potentials. This indicates that the reaction can proceed on Pd at low potentials without the typical “poison” formation. In contrast to its high activity for formic acid oxidation, the Pd film is completely inactive for methanol oxidation. The FTIR spectra show that neither adsorbed CO is formed on the Pd sites nor significant amounts of CO2 are produced during the electrooxidation of methanol.  相似文献   

18.
Well ordered V2O3(0 0 0 1) films were prepared on Au(1 1 1) and W(1 1 0) substrates. These films are terminated by a layer of vanadyl groups under typical UHV conditions. Reduction by electron bombardment may remove the oxygen atoms of the vanadyl layer, leading to a surface terminated by vanadium atoms. The interaction of oxygen with the reduced V2O3(0 0 0 1) surface has been studied in the temperature range from 80 to 610 K. Thermal desorption spectroscopy (TDS), infrared reflection absorption spectroscopy (IRAS), high resolution electron energy loss spectroscopy (HREELS), X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS), and density functional theory (DFT) were used to study the adsorbed oxygen species. Low temperature adsorption of oxygen on reduced V2O3(0 0 0 1) occurs both dissociatively and molecularly. At 90 K a negatively charged molecular oxygen species is observed. Upon annealing the adsorbed oxygen species dissociates, re-oxidizing the reduced surface by the formation of vanadyl species. Density functional theory was employed to calculate the structure and the vibrational frequencies of the O2 species on the surface. Using both cluster and periodic models, the surface species could be identified as η2-peroxo () lying flat on surface, bonded to the surface vanadium atoms. Although the O-O vibrational normal mode involves motions almost parallel to the surface, it can be detected by infrared spectroscopy because it is connected with a change of the dipole moment perpendicular to the surface.  相似文献   

19.
The adsorption properties of CO on the epitaxial five-monolayer Co/Cu(1 0 0) system, where the Co overlayer has stabilized in the metastable fcc-phase, are reported. This system is known to exhibit metallic quantum well (MQW) states at energies 1 eV or greater above the Fermi level, which may influence CO adsorption. The CO/fcc-Co/Cu(1 0 0) system was explored with low energy electron diffraction (LEED), inverse photoemission (IPE), reflection-absorption infrared spectroscopy (RAIRS) and temperature programmed desorption (TPD). Upon CO adsorption, a new feature is observed in IPE at 4.4 eV above EF and is interpreted as the CO 2π level. When adsorbed at room temperature, TPD exhibits a CO desorption peak at ∼355 K, while low temperature adsorption reveals additional binding configurations with TPD features at ∼220 K and ∼265 K. These TPD peak temperatures are correlated with different C-O stretch vibrational frequencies observed in the IR spectra. The adsorption properties of this surface are compared to those of the surfaces of single crystal hcp-Co, as well as other metastable thin film systems.  相似文献   

20.
The adsorption and reaction of vinyl acetate with the clean Pd(1 1 0) surface has been investigated using temperature programmed desorption and molecular beam reaction measurements. These show that, under low pressure conditions, the main reaction pathway above 400 K is total dehydrogenation to yield hydrogen and carbon dioxide in the gas phase, and surface carbon. This occurs at a steady state, notwithstanding the fact that carbon is being deposited continuously onto the surface. The reaction continues because the vast majority of this carbon is lost from the surface to the bulk of the sample. Between about 320-380 K the reaction profile is somewhat different; the molecule dissociates at the CH3COOCHCH2 bond, producing the most stable intermediate, the acetate, and the reaction stops after the build-up of adsorbed acetate and surface carbonaceous species. At ∼300 K, the products are very similar to those for acetaldehyde adsorption (namely, methane, CO and some surface carbon), and they evolve in a non-steady state manner due to the build up of adsorbed CO on the surface. Thus the mechanism is dominated here by dissociation at the CH3COOCHCH2 bond, and formation of the acetyl intermediate. Consideration is given to the connection between these data and vinyl acetate synthesis.  相似文献   

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