Adsorption and Oxidation of Carbon Monoxide on (100) Nickel
- 1 October 1965
- journal article
- research article
- Published by AIP Publishing in The Journal of Chemical Physics
- Vol. 43 (7) , 2351-2354
- https://doi.org/10.1063/1.1697132
Abstract
Exposure of a clean (100) nickel surface to CO results in the formation of a structure designated as (100) Ni c2×2—CO whose unit mesh is twice as large as that of the clean surface. This is interpreted to mean that CO is adsorbed with one molecule to every two atoms of the (100) nickel surface, in contrast to the (110) surface on which one molecule adsorbs to each atomic site. The work function increase due to adsorbed CO was less than for (110) nickel, and a much higher temperature was required to remove the CO from the (100) surface. These results suggest that CO may be bound in a bridged structure on the (100) face rather than a linear bond as on the (110). Heating at temperatures below that required to remove the CO and then cooling to room temperature produced a large increase in the diffraction intensity, suggesting a possible reconstruction of the nickel substrate. Exposure of the CO covered surface to O2 extinguished the diffraction pattern and caused the work function to decrease. If the crystal was then heated, a pattern having the same unit mesh as the initial CO structure appeared, but was shown to be that of the (100) Ni c2×2—O structure, the preadsorbed CO having reacted to form CO2 which was desorbed by heating. CO did not react with a (100) nickel surface which had received prior exposure to O2.Keywords
This publication has 17 references indexed in Scilit:
- Adsorption of oxygen on the {111}, {100} and {110} surfaces of clean nickelSurface Science, 1964
- Infrared Spectroscopy and Catalysis ResearchScience, 1964
- Oxidation of Carbon Monoxide on Thin Films of Nickel, Palladium, and an AlloyThe Journal of Physical Chemistry, 1964
- THE INTERACTION OF O2 WITH A CLEAN (111) NICKEL SURFACEApplied Physics Letters, 1963
- THE FORMATION OF Ni3O IN SINGLE CRYSTALSApplied Physics Letters, 1963
- Heterogeneous Reaction Studies by Infrared AbsorptionThe Journal of Physical Chemistry, 1959
- Influence of lattice-defect density on the chemisorption and oxide formation on a clean (100) crystal face of Nickel as determined by low-energy electron diffractionJournal of Physics and Chemistry of Solids, 1959
- Chemisorption on MetalsNature, 1954
- The Formation of Powder and its Dependence on Crystal Face during the Catalytic Reaction of Hydrogen and Oxygen on a Single Crystal of Copper1Journal of the American Chemical Society, 1954
- The effect of crystal parameter on hydrogenation and dehydrogenationDiscussions of the Faraday Society, 1950