Abstract

Spectroscopic studies of the adsorption of dimethyl sulfoxide, ( CH 3) 2 S = O, on Pt(111) have shown that the molecule is bound to the surface via the sulfur atom in an inverted pyramid configuration. A comparison of XPS and EELS data for the adsorbed multilayer and monolayer with XPS and infrared data on the complex PtCl 2(DMSO) 2 is consistent with sulfur bonding. In addition, we detect a considerable increase of the v( S= O) frequency in the DMSO monolayer with decreasing coverage, indicating a coverage dependent heat of adsorption. UPS data show that on adsorption to form a monolayer, the highest occupied molecular orbital of DMSO, presumably the sulfur “lone pair” orbital, shifts to a higher binding energy. These results show a remarkable similarity between DMSO bonding to a metal surface and bonding to a single Pt 2+ species.

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