An Electron Spectroscopic Study of the Cobalt(101̄2)-Oxygen Interaction: Chemisorption Properties, Oxide Growth and Oxidation States of the Surface Metal Ions
The interaction of oxygen with the stepped (101̄2) surface of cobalt has been investigated over a range of temperature (300–800 K) and pressure (10 −7 −10 +1 Torr) by XPS, UPS and LEED. After completion of a layer of chemisorbed atoms, oxygen uptake proceeds by the nucleation and growth of CoO. An e...
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1984-06-01
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Series: | Adsorption Science & Technology |
Online Access: | https://doi.org/10.1177/026361748400100204 |
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doaj-af8892712dff4f62a76548ca5d11fcdb2021-04-02T09:52:10ZengHindawi - SAGE PublishingAdsorption Science & Technology0263-61742048-40381984-06-01110.1177/026361748400100204An Electron Spectroscopic Study of the Cobalt(101̄2)-Oxygen Interaction: Chemisorption Properties, Oxide Growth and Oxidation States of the Surface Metal IonsE. G. ScottK. A. PriorR. M. LambertThe interaction of oxygen with the stepped (101̄2) surface of cobalt has been investigated over a range of temperature (300–800 K) and pressure (10 −7 −10 +1 Torr) by XPS, UPS and LEED. After completion of a layer of chemisorbed atoms, oxygen uptake proceeds by the nucleation and growth of CoO. An examination of the satellite intensities associated with the Co(2p) levels yields no evidence for the formation of the higher oxide, and valence band UP spectra point to the same conclusion. However, the LEED results indicate that poorly ordered domains of the (100) plane of the Co 3 O 4 spinel lattice are formed after extensive oxidation. A model is proposed which accounts for these observations; it also provides a basis for reconciling a number of conflicting reports in the literature.https://doi.org/10.1177/026361748400100204 |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
E. G. Scott K. A. Prior R. M. Lambert |
spellingShingle |
E. G. Scott K. A. Prior R. M. Lambert An Electron Spectroscopic Study of the Cobalt(101̄2)-Oxygen Interaction: Chemisorption Properties, Oxide Growth and Oxidation States of the Surface Metal Ions Adsorption Science & Technology |
author_facet |
E. G. Scott K. A. Prior R. M. Lambert |
author_sort |
E. G. Scott |
title |
An Electron Spectroscopic Study of the Cobalt(101̄2)-Oxygen Interaction: Chemisorption Properties, Oxide Growth and Oxidation States of the Surface Metal Ions |
title_short |
An Electron Spectroscopic Study of the Cobalt(101̄2)-Oxygen Interaction: Chemisorption Properties, Oxide Growth and Oxidation States of the Surface Metal Ions |
title_full |
An Electron Spectroscopic Study of the Cobalt(101̄2)-Oxygen Interaction: Chemisorption Properties, Oxide Growth and Oxidation States of the Surface Metal Ions |
title_fullStr |
An Electron Spectroscopic Study of the Cobalt(101̄2)-Oxygen Interaction: Chemisorption Properties, Oxide Growth and Oxidation States of the Surface Metal Ions |
title_full_unstemmed |
An Electron Spectroscopic Study of the Cobalt(101̄2)-Oxygen Interaction: Chemisorption Properties, Oxide Growth and Oxidation States of the Surface Metal Ions |
title_sort |
electron spectroscopic study of the cobalt(101̄2)-oxygen interaction: chemisorption properties, oxide growth and oxidation states of the surface metal ions |
publisher |
Hindawi - SAGE Publishing |
series |
Adsorption Science & Technology |
issn |
0263-6174 2048-4038 |
publishDate |
1984-06-01 |
description |
The interaction of oxygen with the stepped (101̄2) surface of cobalt has been investigated over a range of temperature (300–800 K) and pressure (10 −7 −10 +1 Torr) by XPS, UPS and LEED. After completion of a layer of chemisorbed atoms, oxygen uptake proceeds by the nucleation and growth of CoO. An examination of the satellite intensities associated with the Co(2p) levels yields no evidence for the formation of the higher oxide, and valence band UP spectra point to the same conclusion. However, the LEED results indicate that poorly ordered domains of the (100) plane of the Co 3 O 4 spinel lattice are formed after extensive oxidation. A model is proposed which accounts for these observations; it also provides a basis for reconciling a number of conflicting reports in the literature. |
url |
https://doi.org/10.1177/026361748400100204 |
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