Abstract
Two crystalline phases of chloromethane adsorbed on graphite are found, depending upon the coverage. Structures for the two adsorbed layers are proposed, determined from a combination of X-ray and neutron diffraction measurements. The experimentally determined unit cells of both phases are incommensurate and rectangular, with lattice parameters a = 1·014 nm and b = 0·771 nm for the low-coverage phase and a = 0·657 nm and b = 0·426 nm for the high-coverage phase. In the low-coverage phase there are four molecules in the unit cell, arranged to give head to tail zig-zag chains with a p2 space group, and all the molecules lie approximately flat on the surface. The high-coverage phase has two molecules per unit cell, arranged in lines with pg symmetry, elevated from the surface by about 70°. The low-coverage phase melts at a temperature of about 120 K, and the high-coverage phase at around 150 K. There is a coexistence region where the melting point of the high-coverage phase increases with increasing coverage.
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