Probing the properties of the (1 1 1) and (1 0 0) surfaces of LaB6 through infrared spectroscopy of adsorbed CO |
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Authors: | Thomas Yorisaki Aashani Tillekaratne Chuhei Oshima Shigeki Otani |
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Affiliation: | a Department of Chemistry, University of Illinois at Chicago, 845 W. Taylor St., Chicago, IL 60607, USA b Department of Nano Science and Engineering, Waseda University, 3-4-1 Okubo, Shinjuku-ku, Tokyo 169-8555, Japan c Kagami Memorial Laboratory for Material Science and Technology, Waseda University, 2-8-26 Nishiwaseda, Shinjuku-ku, Tokyo 169-0051, Japan d National Institute for Material Science, 1-1 Namiki, Tsukuba-shi, Ibaraki 305-0044, Japan e Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry, Southern Illinois University, Carbondale, IL 62901, USA |
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Abstract: | The adsorption of carbon monoxide on the LaB6(1 0 0) and LaB6(1 1 1) surfaces was studied experimentally with the techniques of reflection absorption infrared spectroscopy and X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy. The interaction of CO with the two surfaces was also studied with density functional theory. Both surfaces adsorb CO molecularly at low temperatures but in markedly different forms. On the LaB6(1 1 1) surface CO initially adsorbs at 90 K in a form that yields a CO stretching mode at 1502-1512 cm−1. With gentle annealing to 120 K, the CO switches to a bonding environment characterized by multiple CO stretch values from 1980 to 2080 cm−1, assigned to one, two, or three CO molecules terminally bonded to the B atoms of a triangular B3 unit at the (1 1 1) surface. In contrast, on the LaB6(1 0 0) surface only a single CO stretch is observed at 2094 cm−1, which is assigned to an atop CO molecule bonded to a La atom. The maximum intensity of the CO stretch vibration on the (1 0 0) surface is higher than on the (1 1 1) surface by a factor of 5. This difference is related to the different orientations of the CO molecules on the two surfaces and to reduced screening of the CO dynamic dipole moment on the (1 0 0) surface, where the bonding occurs further from the surface plane. On LaB6(1 0 0), XPS measurements indicate that CO dissociates on the surface at temperatures above 400 K. |
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Keywords: | Borides, carbon monoxide Low index single crystal surfaces Solid-gas interface Infrared absorption spectroscopy X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy Chemisorption Vibrations of adsorbed molecules Density functional calculations |
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