Abstract

The adsorption, desorption, and surface structural properties of Na and NO on Ag(111), together with their coadsorption and surface reactivity, have been studied by LEED, Auger spectroscopy, and thermal desorption. On the clean surface, non-dissociative adsorption of NO into the a-state occurs at 300 K with an initial sticking probability of ~0.1, saturation occurring at a coverage of ~ 1 20 . Desorption occurs reversibly without decomposition and is characterised by a desorption energy of E d ~ 103 kJ mol −1. In the coverage regime 0 < θ Na < 1, sodium adsorbs in registry with the Ag surface mesh and the desorption spectra show a single peak corresponding to E d ~ 228 kJ mol −1. For multilayer coverages (1 < θ Na < 5) a new low temperature peak appears in the desorption spectra with E d ~ 187 kJ mol −1. This is identified with Na desorption from an essentially Na surface, and the desorption energy indicates that Na atoms beyond the first chemisorbed layer are significantly influenced by the presence of the Ag substrate. The LEED results show that Na multilayers grow as a (√7 × √7) R19.2° overlayer, and are interpreted in a way which is consistent with the above conclusion. Coadsorption of Na and NO leads to the appearance of a more strongly bound and reactive chemisorbed state of NO (β-NO) with E d ~ 121 kJ mol −1. β-NO appears to undego surface dissociation to yield adsorbed O and N atoms whose subsequent reactions lead to the formation of N 2, N 2O, and O 2 as gaseous products. The reactive behaviour of the system is complicated by the effects of Na and O diffusion into the bulk of the specimen, but certain invariant features permit us to postulate an overall reaction mechanism, and the results obtained here are compared with other relevant work.

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