Abstract

The adsorption and decomposition of benzoic acid on the Cu(110) surface has been investigated using temperature-programmed reaction (TPR) spectroscopy and scanning tunneling microscopy (STM). The benzoate species is found to exist in two conformations: a phase containing upright species at monolayer saturation and a phase containing many tilted species at lower coverages. Thermal decomposition begins to occur near 500 K, yielding benzene and CO2. It is found that phenyl radicals, generated preferentially from the tilted benzoate species, efficiently abstract H atoms from undecomposed benzoate species to produce benzene in a rate-controlling process with an activation energy of about 29 kcal/mol. Using deuterium atom substitution at the 4-C position on the benzoate ring, it is found that the hydrogen abstraction reaction is selective for 2-,3- and 5-,6-C-H bonds. This observation indicates that the mobile phenyl radical is surface bound and preferentially attacks C-H bonds which are nearest the Cu surface binding the benzoate species, either as an upright species or as a tilted species.

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