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Reactivity of V2O3(0001) surfaces: molecular vs dissociative adsorption of water
21
Citations
13
References
2006
Year
Materials ScienceMolecular AdsorptionChemical EngineeringSurface CharacterizationEngineeringSurface ChemistrySurface AnalysisSurface ScienceChemisorptionVanadium Surface LayerPhysical ChemistryAdsorptionChemistryHydrogenChemical KineticsSurface ReactivityMolecular Adsorption Channel
The adsorption of water on V2O3(0001) surfaces has been investigated by thermal desorption spectroscopy, high-resolution electron energy loss spectroscopy, and X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy with use of synchrotron radiation. The V2O3(0001) surfaces have been generated in epitaxial thin film form on a Rh(111) substrate with three different surface terminations according to the particular preparation conditions. The stable surface in thermodynamic equilibrium with the bulk is formed by a vanadyl (VO) (1x1) surface layer, but an oxygen-rich (radical3xradical3)R30 degrees reconstruction can be prepared under a higher chemical potential of oxygen (microO), whereas a V-terminated surface consisting of a vanadium surface layer requires a low microO, which can be achieved experimentally by the deposition of V atoms onto the (1x1) VO surface. The latter two surfaces have been used to model, in a controlled way, oxygen and vanadium containing defect centres on V2O3. On the (1x1) V=O and (radical3xradical3)R30 degrees surfaces, which expose only oxygen surface sites, the experimental results indicate consistently that the molecular adsorption of water provides the predominant adsorption channel. In contrast, on the V-terminated (1/radical3x1/radical3)R30 degrees surface the dissociation of water and the formation of surface hydroxyl species at 100 K is readily observed. Besides the dissociative adsorption a molecular adsorption channel exists also on the V-terminated V2O3(0001) surface, so that the water monolayer consists of both OH and molecular H2O species. The V surface layer on V2O3 is very reactive and is reoxidised by adsorbed water at 250 K, yielding surface vanadyl species. The results of this study indicate that V surface centres are necessary for the dissociation of water on V2O3 surfaces.
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