35 research outputs found

    Role of oxygen transients in the facile scission of C-O bonds of alcohols on Zn surfaces

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    The alkoxy species produced by the interaction of alcohols with Zn surfaces undergoes C-O bond scission at 150 K giving hydrocarbon species, but this transformation occurs even at 80 K when alcohol-oxygen mixtures are coadsorbed, due to the oxygen transients

    Interaction of CO with Cu/ZnO catalyst surfaces prepared in situ in the electron spectrometer: evidence for CO2- and related species relevant to methanol synthesis

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    Interaction of CO with the Cu/ZnO catalyst surfaces prepared in situ in the sample preparation chamber of the electron spectrometer has been investigated by X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy. The catalyst surfaces contained different proportions of Cu1+ and Cu-0 species. Besides chemisorbed CO, CO2- and CO32- species are found on the catalyst surface, the proportion of CO2- and CO32- species relative to CO increasing with the Cu1+/Cu-0 ratio. This observation is of significance to methanol synthesis

    A comparative study of the interaction of CO with Cu and Cu-Zn alloy clusters

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    Interaction of CO with Cu clusters deposited on a ZnO(0001) crystal and on ZnO/Zn surfaces (prepared in the electron spectrometer) has been examined by UV and X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy. The interaction is stronger with the small Cu clusters deposited on ZnO/Zn surfaces. Interaction of CO is evert stronger with annealed Cu/ZnO/Zn surfaces where Cu-Zn alloy particles are present. Copyright (C) 1996 Published by Elsevier Science Lt

    Oxidation of methanol on the surfaces of model Cu/ZnO catalysts containing Cu1+ and Cu-0 species

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    Interaction of CH3OH with Cu clusters deposited on ZnO films grown on a Zn foil as well as on a ZnO(0001)Zn crystal, has been examined by X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy. On clean Cu clusters, reversible molecular adsorption or formation of CH3O is observed. However if the Cu clusters are pretreated with oxygen, both CH3O and HCOO- species are produced. Model Cu/ZnO catalyst surfaces, containing both Cu1+ and Cu-0 species, show interesting oxidation properties. On a Cu-0-rich catalyst surface, only CH3O species is formed on interaction with CH3OH. On a Cu1+-rich surface, however, HCOO- ion is the predominant species

    X-ray photoelectron spectroscopic investigations of Cu-Ni, Au-Ag, Ni-Pd, and Cu-Pd bimetallic clusters

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    Core-level binding energies of the component metals in bimetallic clusters of various compositions in the Ni-Cu, Au-Ag, Ni-Pd, and Cu-Pd systems have been measured as functions of coverage or cluster size, after having characterized the clusters with respect to sizes and compositions. The core-level binding energy shifts, relative to the bulk metals, at large coverages or cluster size, Delta E(a), are found to be identical to those of bulk alloys. By substracting the Delta E(a) values from the observed binding energy shifts, Delta E, we obtain the shifts, Delta E(c), due to cluster size. The Delta E(c) values in all the alloy systems increase with the decrease in cluster size. These results establish the additivity of the binding energy shifts due to alloying and cluster size effects in bimetallic clusters

    An investigation of the Cu/ZnO/Zn system: evidence for the formation of Cu-Zn alloys by the inward diffusion of Cu

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    Cu deposited on 5 or 10 \AA thick ZnO layers (grown on Zn metal), has been investigated as a function of Cu coverage by employing X-ray photoelectron and Auger electron spectroscopies. The 2p core-level binding energy of Cu increases with decreasing metal coverage, the maximum shift observed (with respect to bulk Cu metal) at the smallest coverage being \sim 0.9 eV. Temperature dependent studies show that Cu diffuses through the ZnO layer with the rate of diffusion varying with the substrate temperature as well as the oxide layer thickness. The inward diffusion of Cu results in the formation of Cu-Zn alloys. Diffusion kinetic experiments at different temperatures show that the activation energy for diffusion increases with the increasing oxide layer thickness

    Facile C-O bond scission in alcohols on Zn surfaces

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    Interaction of methanol, ethanol, and 2-propanol with polycrystalline as well as (0001) surfaces of Zn has been investigated by photoelectron spectroscopy and vibrational energy loss spectroscopy. All the alcohols show evidence for the condensed species along with the chemisorbed species at 80 K. With increase in temperature to similar to 120 K, the condensed species desorbs, leaving the chemisorbed species which decomposes to give the alkoxy species. The alkoxy species is produced increasingly at lower temperatures as we go from methanol to 2-propanol, the 2-propoxy species occurring even at 80 K. The alkoxy species undergo C-O bond scission giving rise to a hydrocarbon species and oxygen. The C-O bond cleavage occurs at a relatively low temperature of similar to 150 K. The effect of preadsorbed oxygen is to stabilize the methoxy species and prevent C-O bond scission. On the other hand, coadsorption of oxygen with methanol favors the formation of the methoxy species and gives rise to hydrocarbon species arising from the C-O bond scission even at 80 K

    Molecular cart-wheeling

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