Abstract

The growth morphology and interfacial energetics of vapor-deposited Ni on the MgO(100) surface at 300 and 100 K have been studied using single crystal adsorption calorimetry (SCAC), He+ low-energy ion scattering spectroscopy (LEIS), X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS), and low-energy electron diffraction (LEED). At 300 K, the Ni atoms grow as three-dimensional nanoparticles with a saturation number density of 5 × 1016 particles/m2. The differential heat of adsorption at 300 K increases rapidly with coverage, from 276 (initially) to 335 kJ/mol by 0.4 ML. Thereafter, it slowly increases asymptotically to the sublimation enthalpy of bulk Ni (430 kJ/ml) by 9 ML. The Ni 2p3/2 XPS peak binding energy at 300 K is initially (i.e., at 0.16 ML) 1.4 eV higher than that for bulk Ni(solid), but it decreases to that value at high coverage. The Ni atoms form a metastable hcp phase at 300 K when in nanoparticles with diameter <2.5 nm, and the adhesion energy of such Ni nanoparticles to MgO(100) was found to be 3.05 J/m2. At 100 K, the Ni atoms form single adatoms and then 0.17 nm thick 2D islands at low coverage with fewer Ni–Ni bonds compared to the Ni nanoparticles formed at 300 K. Thus, the initial heat (i.e., for the first ∼0.03 ML) is 148 kJ/mol at 100 K, 128 kJ/mol lower than that at 300 K, and remains lower for the 2D islands. With increasing coverage at 100 K, the tiny 2D Ni islands grow in size to cover nearly the entire surface before thickening. The XPS Ni 2p3/2 peak binding energy for 0.21 ML Ni on MgO(100) at 100 K is 2.2 eV higher than that for bulk Ni(solid), suggesting charge transfer from Ni to MgO(100) and formation of Ni2+ at very low coverage.

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