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Lecture 2—Adsorption at Surfaces 1.Adsorption/Desorption 2.Overlayers, lifting reconstruction 3.Dissociative and Associative adsorption 4.1 st and 2 nd order desorption, kinetics Reading— 1

Lecture 2—Adsorption at Surfaces Adsorption/Desorption Overlayers, lifting reconstruction

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Lecture 2—Adsorption at Surfaces Adsorption/Desorption Overlayers, lifting reconstruction Dissociative and Associative adsorption 1 st and 2 nd order desorption, kinetics Reading— Lecture on Langmuir adosrption isotherm P. A. Redhead, Vacuum 12 (1962) 203-211 - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Lecture 2—Adsorption at Surfaces Adsorption/Desorption Overlayers, lifting reconstruction

Lecture 2—Adsorption at Surfaces

1.Adsorption/Desorption

2.Overlayers, lifting reconstruction

3.Dissociative and Associative adsorption

4.1st and 2nd order desorption, kinetics

Reading—Lecture on Langmuir adosrption isotherm

P. A. Redhead, Vacuum 12 (1962) 203-211

Smentkowski and Yates, Surf. Sci. 232 (1990) 1

Page 2: Lecture 2—Adsorption at Surfaces Adsorption/Desorption Overlayers, lifting reconstruction

S S S SS SAAA

A AAdsorption at open site: S = S0

No adsorption at occupied site: S = 0

Monolayer Adsorption:

Assume an Adsorbate (A) can adsorb at an empty surface site with sticking coefficient S0.

If a surface site is already occupied, then no adsorption occurs (S = 0)

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Page 3: Lecture 2—Adsorption at Surfaces Adsorption/Desorption Overlayers, lifting reconstruction

(1x1) unit cell

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Page 4: Lecture 2—Adsorption at Surfaces Adsorption/Desorption Overlayers, lifting reconstruction

Adsorbate forming a (2x2) overlayer on the (1x1) substrate surface

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Unused surface bonds can interact, causing change in surface structure

Surface dimerization

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Page 6: Lecture 2—Adsorption at Surfaces Adsorption/Desorption Overlayers, lifting reconstruction

Surface dimerization

Dissociative adsorption of H2

HHHHHH

Adsorption can induce or lift surface reconstructions (e.g., H/Si(100)

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Associative Adsorption adsorbate does not break bonds during chemisorption, e.g., CO/W

W W W W W W

CO

CO

CO

CO

CO

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Page 8: Lecture 2—Adsorption at Surfaces Adsorption/Desorption Overlayers, lifting reconstruction

W W W W W W

H H

H2

Dissociative adsorption: molecular bonds broken during adsorption

3.g., H2 on W

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Page 9: Lecture 2—Adsorption at Surfaces Adsorption/Desorption Overlayers, lifting reconstruction

Consider adsorption (assoc. or dissoc.) at a surface

In this process, note that the average sticking coefficient will depend on the fractional surface coverage (Θ).

At zero or low coverage, the sticking coefficient will be S0: 0<S0<1

At Θ = 1 (full coverage), S = 0

For 0<Θ<1, we have S = S0(1-Θ)9

Page 10: Lecture 2—Adsorption at Surfaces Adsorption/Desorption Overlayers, lifting reconstruction

We can therefore model adsorption as an equilibrium between adsorbate, and surface sites:

[A] + [S] [AS]

Therefore:

(1)Kads = [AS]/[A][S]

We can then rewrite [AS] and [S] in terms of Θ:

(2)[AS]/[S] = Θ/(1-Θ)

Given that [A] is some constant (C), we can re-write (1) as

Kads = Θ/C(1-Θ), or

(3) Θ = KadsC/(1+KadsC)(the usual form for the Langmuir Isotherm)

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Page 11: Lecture 2—Adsorption at Surfaces Adsorption/Desorption Overlayers, lifting reconstruction

(3) Allows us to determine the fractional surface coverage as a function of C (typically proportional to pressure)

For small C, KadsC << 1, and

Θ ~ KadsC

For large C, we have KadsC >> 1

And Θ ~ 1

Θ

C

Θ~ KadsC

Θ~1

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In many laboratory situations, adsorption at a given temperature is, for all practical purposes, irreversible.

Kads is very large, and the equilibrium fractional surface coverage is 1.

However, we are often concerned with the kinetics of coverage, as we can control the total exposure of a gas to the surface. Assuming that once adsorbed at a given temperature, A will not desorb, we have

Θ = SFt where S = sticking coefficient, F = flux to the surface (suitably normalized, and proportional to pressure), and t = time.

Ft = “exposure”. Typically, exposure is measured in “Langmuirs” (L) where L = 10-6 Torr-sec

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Page 13: Lecture 2—Adsorption at Surfaces Adsorption/Desorption Overlayers, lifting reconstruction

Note, however, the S is not constant.

We have S = S0(1-Θ)

We then have :

(4) Θ = S0(1-Θ)cPt where c is a constant, and P = Pressure

Differentiating both sides of (4) with respect to t,

(5) dΘ/dt = S0cP – S0cP(dΘ/dt)

For Θ << 1, we have

dΘ/dt ~ S0cP, and coverage will increase linearly with exposure

For Θ ~ 1,

(6) then dΘ/dt = 0, and coverage is constant with time 13

Page 14: Lecture 2—Adsorption at Surfaces Adsorption/Desorption Overlayers, lifting reconstruction

Θ

P x t

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Page 15: Lecture 2—Adsorption at Surfaces Adsorption/Desorption Overlayers, lifting reconstruction

Interrogating adsorption and desorption

Temperature Programmed Desorption (TPD)Temperature Programmed Reaction Spectroscopy (TPRS)

Typical experimental apparatus(Gates, et al., Surf. Sci. 159 (1985) 233

Typically need:

•QMS with line of site

•Controlled dosing

•Temperature control with linear ramp

•Another method to monitor surface composition/structure (Auger, XPS, LEED…) 15

Page 16: Lecture 2—Adsorption at Surfaces Adsorption/Desorption Overlayers, lifting reconstruction

TPDStep 1:Adsorption at Low Temp

Step 2:Desorption vs. temperature: dT/dt ~ 1-10 K/sec

QMS

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Page 17: Lecture 2—Adsorption at Surfaces Adsorption/Desorption Overlayers, lifting reconstruction

1st and 2nd order desorption

1st order, desorption occurs from a surface site

2nd order, desorption occurs after surface reaction and combination, e.g.;

Hads + Hads H2 desorbed

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Page 18: Lecture 2—Adsorption at Surfaces Adsorption/Desorption Overlayers, lifting reconstruction

In monitoring desorption from a surface, the desorption rate (N(t); molecules/cm2-sec) is proportional to two pressure-dependent terms (see Redhead)

aN(t) = dp/dt + p/λ

a = constant (dependent on surface area) p = pressure λ = pumping time (reciprocal of pumping rate)

In modern vacuum systems, λ is very small, and p/λ becomes the dominant term.

The desorption rate is therefore proportional to the (partial) pressure as measured by the QMS:

N(t) = kp

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Page 19: Lecture 2—Adsorption at Surfaces Adsorption/Desorption Overlayers, lifting reconstruction

We can therefore monitor the desorption rate by looking at the change in partial pressure of the desorbing species (e.g., H2, CO, etc.) in the QMS:

PCO

T ( = T0 + βt)

Temperature of desorption rate maximum

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Page 20: Lecture 2—Adsorption at Surfaces Adsorption/Desorption Overlayers, lifting reconstruction

We can (Redhead) express N(t) as the product of an Arrhenius rate equation:

(7) N(t) = -dѳ/dt = vnѳn exp(-E/RT)

v = rate constant n = order of the reaction ѳ = concentration of adsorbates (molecules/cm2) E = activation energy

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Page 21: Lecture 2—Adsorption at Surfaces Adsorption/Desorption Overlayers, lifting reconstruction

Given that T = T0 + βt (the linear heating rate is critical), we can solve (7) for the temperature at which N(t) is a maximum (T = TP) (Redhead, again)

For n = 1 (1st order) (v1 is the first order rate constant)

(8a)E/(RTp2) = ( v1/β)exp(-E/RTp) TP independent of surface coverage

(note: this assumes E does not vary with surface coverage; not always true)

For n = 2 (2nd order)

(8b) E/RTP2 = (σ0v2/β)exp(-R/TP) TP is a function of initial surface coverage (σ0)

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Page 22: Lecture 2—Adsorption at Surfaces Adsorption/Desorption Overlayers, lifting reconstruction

From 8a, b, we can see that one way to distinguish 1st from 2nd order desorption processes is to due the same desorption expt at different surface coverages:

Initial coverage, 0.7 ML

Initial coverage, 0.4 ML

Initial coverage, 0.4 ML

1st order reaction, temp. of peak maximum is invariant with initial coverage.

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Page 23: Lecture 2—Adsorption at Surfaces Adsorption/Desorption Overlayers, lifting reconstruction

2nd Order: Peak temperature decreases with increasing initial coverage (desorption of H2 from W: Redhead)

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Adsorption and Surface Reconstruction

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