Abstract

The oxidation of Pd(1 0 0) by an oxygen plasma was characterized using X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS), low energy ion scattering spectroscopy (ISS), temperature programmed desorption (TPD), and low energy electron diffraction (LEED). The oxygen uptake followed a typical parabolic profile with oxygen coverages reaching 32 ML after 1 h in the plasma; a factor of 40 higher than could be achieved by dosing molecular oxidants in ultra high vacuum. Even after adsorbing 32 ML of oxygen, XPS revealed both metallic Pd and PdO in the surface region. The ( 5 × 5 ) R27 o LEED pattern previously attributed to a surface oxide monolayer, slowly attenuated with oxygen coverage indicating that the PdO formed poorly ordered three dimensional clusters that slowly covered the ordered surface oxide. While XPS revealed the formation of bulk PdO, only small changes in the ISS spectra were observed once the surface oxide layer was completed. The leading edges of the O 2 TPD curves showed only small shifts with increasing oxygen coverage that could be explained in terms of the lower thermodynamic stability of small oxide clusters. The desorption curves, however, could not be adequately described as simple zero order decomposition of PdO. There has been an ongoing debate in the literature about the relative catalytic activities of PdO and oxygen phases on Pd, the results indicate that any differences in the reactivity between bulk PdO and surface oxides are not associated with differences in the density of exposed Pd atoms or the decomposition kinetics of these two phases.

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