Issue 23, 2010

Adsorption states and mobility of trimethylacetic acid molecules on reduced TiO2(110) surface

Abstract

Combined scanning tunneling microscopy (STM), X-rays photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS) and density functional theory (DFT) studies have probed the bonding configurations and mobility of trimethylacetic acid (TMAA) molecules on the TiO2(110) surface at RT. Upon TMAA dissociation through deprotonation, two distinctly different types of stable chemisorption configurations of the carboxylate group (TMA) have been identified according to their position and appearance in STM images. In configuration A, two carboxylate O atoms bond to two Ti4+ cations, while in configuration B one O atom fills the bridging oxygen vacancy (VO) with the other O bounded at an adjacent regular Ti4+ site. Calculated adsorption energies for the configurations A and B are comparable at 1.28 and 1.36 eV, respectively. DFT results also show that TMA may rotate at RT about its O atom that filled the VO (in configuration B), with a rotation barrier of ∼0.65 eV. Both the observation of the constant initial sticking coefficient and preference for TMAA molecules to dissociate at selective sites indicate that TMAA adsorption is mediated by a mobile precursor state. Several possible molecular (physisorbed) states of TMAA have indeed been identified by DFT, all being highly mobile at RT. In contrast, the TMA diffusion in the chemisorbed (dissociative) state is a very slow with a calculated barrier of 1.09 eV for diffusion along the Ti row.

Graphical abstract: Adsorption states and mobility of trimethylacetic acid molecules on reduced TiO2(110) surface

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
21 Oct 2009
Accepted
22 Mar 2010
First published
21 May 2010

Phys. Chem. Chem. Phys., 2010,12, 5986-5992

Adsorption states and mobility of trimethylacetic acid molecules on reduced TiO2(110) surface

I. Lyubinetsky, N. A. Deskins, Y. Du, E. K. Vestergaard, D. J. Kim and M. Dupuis, Phys. Chem. Chem. Phys., 2010, 12, 5986 DOI: 10.1039/B921921H

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