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Stimulated CO Dissociation and Surface Graphitization by Microfocused X-ray and Electron Beams

Authors :
Cristina Lenardi
Alessandro Sala
Andrea Locatelli
Pietro Genoni
Francesca Genuzio
B. Santos
Tevfik Onur Menteş
Source :
Journal of physical chemistry. C 123 (2019): 8360–8369. doi:10.1021/acs.jpcc.8b09043, info:cnr-pdr/source/autori:Genuzio F.; Genoni P.; Mentes T.O.; Santos B.; Sala A.; Lenardi C.; Locatelli A./titolo:Stimulated CO Dissociation and Surface Graphitization by Microfocused X-ray and Electron Beams/doi:10.1021%2Facs.jpcc.8b09043/rivista:Journal of physical chemistry. C/anno:2019/pagina_da:8360/pagina_a:8369/intervallo_pagine:8360–8369/volume:123
Publication Year :
2018
Publisher :
American Chemical Society (ACS), 2018.

Abstract

The irradiation with photons or electrons can dramatically influence the chemical stability of a molecule, either free or adsorbed on a surface, inducing its fragmentation or desorption. We revisit here the exostimulated dissociation of CO, a prototypical case, choosing hcp thin cobalt films as model support. Intense, microfocused soft X-rays or electron beams are used to locally stimulate CO dissociation. Fast-XPS gives direct access to the adsorbates' chemical state and coverage during irradiation, enabling the kinetics of the process to be monitored in real time. The energy-dependent cross sections for photon and electron stimulated molecular dissociation and desorption are estimated for a fixed initial CO coverage of 1 / 3 ML. In the soft X-ray regime, the desorption channel always prevails over dissociation and is significantly enhanced above the O K edge. The relative dissociation probability increases steadily with increasing photon energy, reaching 30% at 780 eV. Furthermore, we show that low energy electrons in the range 50 to 200 eV dissociate CO more efficiently than X-rays. The prolonged irradiation of the Co surface in CO ambient is found to produce a continuous increase of the carbon coverage, initially promoting the formation of carbides and subsequently accumulating sp 2 carbon on the surface. Far from being a detrimental effect, the CO stimulated dissociation can be exploited to lithographically graft carbon-rich microscopic patterns on Co, with resolution well into the nanometer scale. A brief thermal treatment following irradiation results in the formation of a graphitic carbon overlayer, which effectively protects Co from oxidation upon exposure to ambient conditions, preserving its out-of-plane magnetic anisotropy and domain configuration.

Details

ISSN :
19327455 and 19327447
Volume :
123
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
The Journal of Physical Chemistry C
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....9d88b8ee9288910e1960aea583775403