7 research outputs found
Competition between Organics and Bromide at the Aqueous SolutionâAir Interface as Seen from Ozone Uptake Kinetics and Xâray Photoelectron Spectroscopy
A more detailed understanding of
the heterogeneous chemistry of
halogenated species in the marine boundary layer is required. Here,
we studied the reaction of ozone (O<sub>3</sub>) with NaBr solutions
in the presence and absence of citric acid (C<sub>6</sub>H<sub>8</sub>O<sub>7</sub>) under ambient conditions. Citric acid is used as a
proxy for oxidized organic material present at the ocean surface or
in sea spray aerosol. On neat NaBr solutions, the observed kinetics
is consistent with bulk reaction-limited uptake, and a second-order
rate constant for the reaction of O<sub>3</sub> + Br<sup>â</sup> is 57 ± 10 M<sup>â1</sup> s<sup>â1</sup>. On
mixed NaBrâcitric acid aqueous solutions, the uptake kinetics
was faster than that predicted by bulk reaction-limited uptake and
also faster than expected based on an acid-catalyzed mechanism. X-ray
photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS) on a liquid microjet of the same
solutions at 1.0 Ă 10<sup>â3</sup>â1.0 Ă 10<sup>â4</sup> mbar was used to obtain quantitative insight into
the interfacial composition relative to that of the bulk solutions.
It revealed that the bromide anion becomes depleted by 30 ± 10%
while the sodium cation gets enhanced by 40 ± 20% at the aqueous
solutionâair interface of a 0.12 M NaBr solution mixed with
2.5 M citric acid in the bulk, attributed to the role of citric acid
as a weak surfactant. Therefore, the enhanced reactivity of bromide
solutions observed in the presence of citric acid is not necessarily
attributable to a surface reaction but could also result from an increased
solubility of ozone at higher citric acid concentrations. Whether
the acid-catalyzed chemistry may have a larger effect on the surface
than in the bulk to offset the effect of bromide depletion also remains
open
Self-Assembly and Superexchange Coupling of Magnetic Molecules on Oxygen-Reconstructed Ferromagnetic Thin Film
We report on the distinctive molecular assembly and exchange coupling of paramagnetic manganese(III) tetraphenylporphyrin chloride (MnTPPCl) molecules on a metallic cobalt (Co(001)) and on an oxygen-reconstructed cobalt (O/Co(001)) substrate, the latter substrate being prepared by surfactant-mediated growth. For MnTPPCl, a ferromagnetic (FM) exchange coupling to Co(001) and an antiferromagnetic (AFM) exchange coupling to O/Co(001) were identified. The random adsorption of MnTPPCl on Co(001) is turned into a self-assembled and well-ordered 2D molecular domains on O/Co(001). Different oxidation states for Mn ions are found to exist on different substrates. The here presented spectromicroscopy-correlation approach, involving X-ray magnetic circular dichroism (XMCD) spectroscopy, X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS), low-energy electron diffraction (LEED), and scanning tunneling microscopy (STM), demonstrates its strength to identify the mechanism involved in organic spintronic interfaces
LiquidâVapor Interface of Formic Acid Solutions in Salt Water: A Comparison of Macroscopic Surface Tension and Microscopic in Situ Xâray Photoelectron Spectroscopy Measurements
The liquidâvapor interface
is difficult to access experimentally
but is of interest from a theoretical and applied point of view and
has particular importance in atmospheric aerosol chemistry. Here we
examine the liquidâvapor interface for mixtures of water, sodium
chloride, and formic acid, an abundant chemical in the atmosphere.
We compare the results of surface tension and X-ray photoelectron
spectroscopy (XPS) measurements over a wide range of formic acid concentrations.
Surface tension measurements provide a macroscopic characterization
of solutions ranging from 0 to 3 M sodium chloride and from 0 to over
0.5 mole fraction formic acid. Sodium chloride was found to be a weak
salting out agent for formic acid with surface excess depending only
slightly on salt concentration. In situ XPS provides a complementary
molecular level description about the liquidâvapor interface.
XPS measurements over an experimental probe depth of 51 Ă
gave
the C 1s to O 1s ratio for both total oxygen and oxygen from water.
XPS also provides detailed electronic structure information that is
inaccessible by surface tension. Density functional theory calculations
were performed to understand the observed shift in C 1s binding energies
to lower values with increasing formic acid concentration. Part of
the experimental â0.2 eV shift can be assigned to the solution
composition changing from predominantly monomers of formic acid to
a combination of monomers and dimers; however, the lack of an appropriate
reference to calibrate the absolute BE scale at high formic acid mole
fraction complicates the interpretation. Our data are consistent with
surface tension measurements yielding a significantly more surface
sensitive measurement than XPS due to the relatively weak propensity
of formic acid for the interface. A simple model allowed us to replicate
the XPS results under the assumption that the surface excess was contained
in the top four angstroms of solution
The Extent of Platinum-Induced Hydrogen Spillover on Cerium Dioxide
Hydrogen spillover from metal nanoparticles to oxides
is an essential
process in hydrogenation catalysis and other applications such as
hydrogen storage. It is important to understand how far this process
is reaching over the surface of the oxide. Here, we present a combination
of advanced sample fabrication of a model system and in situ X-ray
photoelectron spectroscopy to disentangle local and far-reaching effects
of hydrogen spillover in a platinumâceria catalyst. At low
temperatures (25â100 °C and 1 mbar H2) surface
OâH formed by hydrogen spillover on the whole ceria surface
extending microns away from the platinum, leading to a reduction of
Ce4+ to Ce3+. This process and structures were
strongly temperature dependent. At temperatures above 150 °C
(at 1 mbar H2), OâH partially disappeared from the
surface due to its decreasing thermodynamic stability. This resulted
in a ceria reoxidation. Higher hydrogen pressures are likely to shift
these transition temperatures upward due to the increasing chemical
potential. The findings reveal that on a catalyst containing a structure
capable to promote spillover, hydrogen can affect the whole catalyst
surface and be involved in catalysis and restructuring
Centimeter-Sized Single-Orientation Monolayer Hexagonal Boron Nitride With or Without Nanovoids
Large-area
hexagonal boron nitride (<i>h</i>-BN) promises
many new applications of two-dimensional materials, such as the protective
packing of reactive surfaces or as membranes in liquids. However,
scalable production beyond exfoliation from bulk single crystals remained
a major challenge. Single-orientation monolayer <i>h</i>-BN nanomesh is grown on 4 in. wafer single crystalline rhodium films
and transferred on arbitrary substrates such as SiO<sub>2</sub>, germanium,
or transmission electron microscopy grids. The transfer process involves
application of tetraoctylammonium bromide before electrochemical hydrogen
delamination. The material performance is demonstrated with two applications.
First, protective sealing of <i>h</i>-BN is shown by preserving
germanium from oxidation in air at high temperatures. Second, the
membrane functionality of the single <i>h</i>-BN layer is
demonstrated in aqueous solutions. Here, we employ a growth substrate
intrinsic preparation scheme to create regular 2 nm holes that serve
as ion channels in liquids
Controlling the Dimensionality of On-Surface Coordination Polymers via Endo- or Exoligation
The
formation of on-surface coordination polymers is controlled
by the interplay of chemical reactivity and structure of the building
blocks, as well as by the orientating role of the substrate registry.
Beyond the predetermined patterns of structural assembly, the chemical
reactivity of the reactants involved may provide alternative pathways
in their aggregation. Organic molecules, which are transformed in
a surface reaction, may be subsequently trapped via coordination of
homo- or heteroÂmetal adatoms, which may also play a role in
the molecular transformation. The amino-functionalized perylene derivative,
4,9-diaminoÂperylene quinone-3,10-diimine (DPDI), undergoes specific
levels of dehydrogenation (â1 H<sub>2</sub> or â3 H<sub>2</sub>) depending on the nature of the present adatoms (Fe, Co,
Ni or Cu). In this way, the molecule is converted to an endo- or an
exoligand, possessing a concave or convex arrangement of ligating
atoms, which is decisive for the formation of either 1D or 2D coordination
polymers
Optically Triggered NeÌel Vector Manipulation of a Metallic Antiferromagnet Mn<sub>2</sub>Au under Strain
The absence of stray fields, their insensitivity to external
magnetic
fields, and ultrafast dynamics make antiferromagnets promising candidates
for active elements in spintronic devices. Here, we demonstrate manipulation
of the NeÌel vector in the metallic collinear antiferromagnet
Mn2Au by combining strain and femtosecond laser excitation.
Applying tensile strain along either of the two in-plane easy axes
and locally exciting the sample by a train of femtosecond pulses,
we align the NeÌel vector along the direction controlled by
the applied strain. The dependence on the laser fluence and strain
suggests the alignment is a result of optically triggered depinning
of 90° domain walls and their motion in the direction of the
free energy gradient, governed by the magneto-elastic coupling. The
resulting, switchable state is stable at room temperature and insensitive
to magnetic fields. Such an approach may provide ways to realize robust
high-density memory device with switching time scales in the picosecond
range