Publication | Open Access
Dynamics of Pyridine Adsorption on Gold(111) Terraces in Acid Solution from <i>in-Situ</i> Scanning Tunneling Microscopy under Potentiostatic Control
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Citations
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References
1997
Year
EngineeringChemistryMolecular DynamicsPyridine AdsorptionChemical EngineeringTunneling MicroscopyAcid SolutionSurface ElectrochemistryElectroadsorption MeasurementsChemisorptionSurface ConcentrationPhysical ChemistryPotentiostatic ControlAdsorptionPy MoleculesElectrochemistrySurface ChemistrySurface ScienceApplied PhysicsSurface Reactivity
The adsorption of pyridine (Py) on Au(111) terraces produced from aqueous 0.1 M HClO4 + 10-3 M Py at 298 K was studied in the potential range 0.15 V < E < 0.55 V (vs SHE) by in-situ scanning tunneling microscopy. When E ≥ Epzc, the potential of zero charge of the substrate, both ordered and disordered domains can be observed. Ordered domains correspond to vertically adsorbed Py molecules forming a (4 × 4) hexagonal lattice with the nearest neighbor distance d = 0.38 nm, and corrugation z = 0.04 nm. The ordered adsorbate structure disappears for E < Epzc, but it is recovered several minutes after stepping E backward to E > Epzc, as expected for a reversible potential-step-induced surface process. The surface concentration of adsorbed Py molecules resulting from the (4 × 4) lattice is close to 1 × 10-9 mol/cm2, a figure exceeding the average integral surface concentration value obtained from electroadsorption measurements. Therefore, disordered domains would be related to a mobile diluted Py adsorbate coexisting with ordered Py adsorbate domains leading to a nonhomogeneous Py adsorbate layer at the positively charged Au(111) terraces.
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