The (111) Surface of NaAu2: Structure, Composition, and Stability
Author(s) -
Emma J. Kwolek,
Roland Widmer,
Oliver Gröning,
Okan Deniz,
Holly Walen,
Chad D. Yuen,
Wenyu Huang,
D. L. Schlagel,
Mark Wallingford,
P. A. Thiel
Publication year - 2014
Publication title -
inorganic chemistry
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.348
H-Index - 233
eISSN - 1520-510X
pISSN - 0020-1669
DOI - 10.1021/ic5025444
Subject(s) - chemistry , annealing (glass) , scanning tunneling microscope , impurity , nanometre , thermal stability , diffraction , ion , lattice (music) , chemical physics , quantum tunnelling , surface reconstruction , crystal structure , crystallography , surface layer , thermal , scanning electron microscope , nanotechnology , surface (topology) , chemical engineering , layer (electronics) , condensed matter physics , optics , materials science , physics , geometry , mathematics , organic chemistry , acoustics , engineering , meteorology , composite material
The (111) surface of single-crystal NaAu(2) is a model for catalytically active, powdered NaAu(2). We prepare and characterize this surface with a broad suite of techniques. Preparation in ultrahigh vacuum consists of the traditional approach of ion bombardment (to remove impurities) and thermal annealing (to restore surface order). Both of these steps, however, cause loss of sodium (Na), and repeated treatments eventually trigger conversion of the surface and near-surface regions to crystalline gold. The bulk has a limited ability to repopulate the surface Na. Under conditions where Na depletion is minimized, electron diffraction patterns are consistent with the bulk-terminated structure, and scanning tunneling microscopy reveals mesa-like features with lateral dimensions of a few tens of nanometers. The tops of the mesas do not possess fine structure characteristic of a periodic lattice, suggesting that the surface layer is disordered under the conditions of these experiments.
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