Abstract

The oxidation of the single crystal stepped Pt 3 Ti (510) surface at oxygen pressures below 10-5 mbar and at a temperature of 770 K was studied by means of X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS), low energy ion scattering (LEIS) and low energy electron diffraction (LEED). Scanning tunneling microscopy (STM) was used to follow the evolution of the surface morphology on the atomic scale. The clean surface studied in ultrahigh vacuum conditions was found by LEIS to be composed of platinum only in the outermost surface plane. LEED and STM indicate that the clean Pt 3 Ti (510) surface consists of (100) terraces separated by double atomic steps. The exposure of the clean surface to oxygen at pressures in the range of 10-7–10-5 mbar leads to the growth of a titanium oxide layer (with a composition close to TiO) which covers completely the substrate surface. The TiO film has long range order and exhibits complex LEED patterns. The STM measurements indicate that the ordered array of steps is kept in the early stages of the oxide film growth, whereas a change of the step morphology and step orientation is observed during the oxidation process.

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