Abstract

The optical properties of foreign metal submonolayers formed on Au, Ag, Cu, Pt and Pd electrodes through the underpotential deposition have been investigated by specular reflectivity measurement. Based on the spectral characteristics, 14 adsorbate-substrate systems were classified into 2 groups. The first group, involving Bi on Au, Cu on Au, Pb on Au, Tl on Au, Tl on Ag and Cd on Cu, is characterized by the similarity of the optical properties of the adsorbed metal in the submonolayer to those of bulk metal. The first monolayer was found to form through several submonolayer stages, in which the optical constants are slightly different from each other. In the second group, involving Cd on Au, In on Au, Sn on Au, Ag on Pt, Bi on Pt, Cu on Pt, Pb on Pt and Bi on Pd, the spectra of submonolayer observed experimentally differ from those calculated with the assumption that the optical properties of adatom and substrate are the same as those of corresponding bulk metal. The difference in the work functions between adsorbate and substrate materials in this group is larger than those in the first group. From these findings, some considerations were made to interpret the origin of the specular reflectance change due to the presence of metal adlayer on the electrode surface. The results allow a tentative conclusion that the reflectivity change is predominantly attributed to the optical properties of the adsorbed submonolayer, but at the same time the work function of the substrate and the interband transition in visible should also be taken into consideration.

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