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Sulfur dioxide adsorption and reaction with atomic oxygen on the Ag(110) surface
Authors:Duane A Outka  RJ Madix
Institution:Departments of Chemical Engineering and Chemistry, Stanford University, Stanford, California 94305, USA
Abstract:The adsorption of SO2 on Ag(110) and the reaction of SO2 with oxygen adatoms have been studied under ultrahigh vacuum conditions using low energy electron diffraction, temperature programmed reaction spectroscopy and photoelectron spectroscopy. Below 300 K, SO2 adsorbs molecularly giving p(1×2) and c(4×2) LEED patterns at coverages of one half and three quarter monolayers. respectively. At intermediate coverages, streaked diffraction patterns, similar to those reported for noble gas and alkali metal adsorption on the (110) face of face-centered cubic metals were observed, indicating adsorption out of registry with the surface. A feature at low binding energy in the ultraviolet photoemission spectrum appeared which was assigned to a weak chemisorption bond to the surface via the sulfur, analogous to bonding observed in SO2-amine charge transfer complexes and in transition metal complexes. SO2 exhibited three binding states on Ag(110) with binding energies of 41, 53 and 64 kJ mol?1; no decomposition on clean Ag(110) was observed. On oxygen pretreated Ag(110), SO2 reacted with oxygen adatoms to form SO3(a), as determined by X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy. Reacting preadsorbed atomic oxygen in a p(2 × 1) structure with SO2 resulted in a c(6 × 2) pattern for SO3(a). The adsorbed SO3(a) decomposed and disproportionated upon heating to 500 K to yield SO2(g), SO4(a) and subsurface oxygen.
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