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Adventitious carbon—the panacea for energy referencing?
422
Citations
19
References
1982
Year
EngineeringChemical AnalysisEnergy ReferencingHydrocarbon Contamination LayerCarbon AccountingOrganic ChemistryChemistryChemical EngineeringEnvironmental ChemistryEnvironmental Analytical ChemistryAnalytical ChemistryHydrocarbon ContaminationCarbon CycleCarbon CreditCarbon SequestrationChemical MeasurementEnergyLow-carbon Energy SystemsCarbonizationEnergy Transition
Adventitious carbon originates from surface contamination, and its C 1s binding energy is influenced by various factors. The study compares internal energy references—such as sodium phosphate salts—to alternative methods (soot deposition, in‑situ VOC condensation, mixing with reference compounds) for calibrating C 1s binding energies. C 1s binding energies from adventitious carbon vary with substrate, so while convenient, this reference should be used cautiously.
Abstract A brief historical review has been made of the values assigned to the binding energy of C 1s electrons from hydrocarbon contamination on sample surfaces. The particular energy calibration technique used for each electron spectrometer on which the C 1s determination was made has been identified. There are notable variations in the C 1s electron binding energy for a hydrocarbon contamination layer with respect to the substrate on which it was measured. The possible source and nature of adventitious carbon have been discussed, as have factors which can affect its C 1s binding energy value. Sodium phosphate salts have been used to illustrate the relative merits of using an internal energy reference line rather than the C 1s electrons from the adventitious carbon layers of these salts. Alternative energy referencing techniques, which include deposition of soot from a candle flame and deliberate ‘ in situ ’ condensation of a volatile organic compound onto the sample surface, have been compared with the method under review. Another possible method is the mixing of powdered samples with reference compounds (e.g. graphite). It is concluded that, although the use of C 1s electrons from adventitious carbon layers is often a convenient method of energy referencing, interpretation of binding energy data obtained should be treated with caution.
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