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Coverage Effects and the Nature of the Metal−Sulfur Bond in S/Au(111): High-Resolution Photoemission and Density-Functional Studies
196
Citations
73
References
2002
Year
EngineeringMetal NanoparticlesMetallic NanomaterialsChemistrySpectroscopic PropertyMetal−sulfur BondGold SurfaceCoverage EffectsMaterials SciencePhotochemistryPhysicsNanotechnologyAtomic PhysicsPhysical ChemistryQuantum ChemistryAdsorption SiteSlab CalculationsSurface CharacterizationHigh-resolution PhotoemissionSurface ChemistryNatural SciencesSurface ScienceApplied PhysicsCondensed Matter PhysicsSurface Reactivity
The bonding of sulfur to surfaces of gold is an important subject in several areas of chemistry, physics, and materials science. Synchrotron-based high-resolution photoemission and first-principles density-functional (DF) slab calculations were used to study the interaction of sulfur with a well-defined Au(111) surface and polycrystalline gold. Our experimental and theoretical results show a complex behavior for the sulfur/Au(111) interface as a function of coverage and temperature. At small sulfur coverages, the adsorption of S on fcc hollow sites of the gold substrate is energetically more favorable than adsorption on bridge or a-top sites. Under these conditions, S behaves as a weak electron acceptor but substantially reduces the density-of-states that gold exhibits near the Fermi edge. As the sulfur coverage increases, there is a weakening of the Au-S bonds (with a simultaneous reduction in the Au --> S charge transfer and a modification in the S sp hybridization) that facilitates changes in adsorption site and eventually leads to S-S bonding. At sulfur coverages above 0.4 ML, S(2) and not atomic S is the more stable species on the gold surface. Formation of S(n)(n > 2) species occurs at sulfur coverages higher than a monolayer. Very similar trends were observed for the adsorption of sulfur on polycrystalline surfaces of gold. The S atoms bonded to Au(111) display a unique mobility/reactivity not seen on surfaces of early or late transition metals.
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