1987
DOI: 10.1016/0039-6028(87)90225-1
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CO2 adsorption and reaction on Fe(111): An angle resolved photoemission (ARUPS) study

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Cited by 103 publications
(29 citation statements)
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“…It also showed that CO 2 adsorbs dissociatively on clean Mo(1 0 0) [52] and polycrystalline Mo [53] at the lower temperature. It was believed that on Ni(1 1 0), Ni(1 0 0) and Fe(1 1 1) the chemisorbed CO dÀ 2 anionic species represents an intrinsic precursor for CO 2 dissociation into CO and atomic oxygen [54,55]. Nassir and Dwyer [56] found that CO 2 is strongly chemisorbed on For CH 3 , the top, bridge and 3-fold hollow adsorption sites are considered.…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…It also showed that CO 2 adsorbs dissociatively on clean Mo(1 0 0) [52] and polycrystalline Mo [53] at the lower temperature. It was believed that on Ni(1 1 0), Ni(1 0 0) and Fe(1 1 1) the chemisorbed CO dÀ 2 anionic species represents an intrinsic precursor for CO 2 dissociation into CO and atomic oxygen [54,55]. Nassir and Dwyer [56] found that CO 2 is strongly chemisorbed on For CH 3 , the top, bridge and 3-fold hollow adsorption sites are considered.…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…It can be considered that at a low pressure of 0.005 MPa, the amount of iron carbonate and/or bicarbonate is insufficient to lengthen service life, and the surface layers are removed easily by rubbing, causing high friction. In this case, adsorbed CO 2 molecules on the metallic iron surface dissociate to form CO species [24,25]. Since the amount of CO 2 is small, the oxidation of metallic iron may be incomplete.…”
Section: Xps Analysismentioning
confidence: 97%
“…This difference can be explained by the serious chemical wear of the surface layer, which is deleterious for low friction and wear [2], and causes the exposure of the underlying metallic iron. In this case, ferrous oxide also can be formed by the dissociation of chemisorbed CO 2 molecules on the metallic iron surface [24,25]. The resultant oxide reacts with CO 2 molecules to produce iron carbonate.…”
Section: Xps Analysismentioning
confidence: 98%
“…Bent CO2 as a precursor to dissociation has also been reported between 160-180 K 25 and at 130 K 26 on Fe (111). Hess et al 26 , using high resolution electron loss spectroscopy (HREELS) studies, observed a weakly bound unstable linear CO2 mode and two stable bent CO2 modes on the (111) facet.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 98%