Abstract

The reactivity of clean and pre-oxidised Cu(1 1 1) surfaces exposed to sulphur (H 2S) has been studied at room temperature by Auger electron spectroscopy, low energy electron diffraction and scanning tunneling microscopy. On the clean surface, the sulphur-saturated surface structure is dominated by the 4 1 3 5 or so-called “zigzag” superstructure. It is shown that a single orientation domain is favoured by the slight misorientation (∼2°) of the surface with respect to the (1 1 1) plane. Scanning tunneling microscopy measurements also revealed two minority structures. Pre-oxidation 4 1 3 8 - O / Cu ( 1 1 1 ) structure was performed by exposure to 1.5 × 10 4 L of O 2 at 300 °C. Under exposure to H 2S (1 × 10 −7 mbar) at room temperature, the oxygen is totally substituted by sulphur. Once initiated, sulphur adsorption seems to propagate to cover the whole surface on the O-covered surface faster than on the clean Cu(1 1 1). At saturation by adsorbed sulphur, the surface is completely covered by the ( 7 × 7 ) R 19.1 superstructure of highest coverage. This enhanced uptake of sulphur is assigned to the surface reconstruction of the copper surface induced by the pre-oxidation, causing a stronger reactivity of the Cu atoms released by the decomposition of the oxide.

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