Journal of Electroanalytical Chemistry, Vol.409, No.1-2, 155-164, 1996
The Surface-Structure of Au(111) in the Presence of Organic Adlayers - A Combined Electrochemical and Surface X-Ray-Scattering Study
In situ X-ray scattering studies of the Au(111) electrode surface have been carried out in KClO4 solutions containing uracil, pyridine or 2,2’-bipyridine using grazing incident-angle diffraction. At sufficiently negative potentials, the (p x root 3) surface reconstruction forms with a stripe separation p = 23. The formation of a two-dimensional condensed uracil film or a complete monolayer of planar oriented pyridine or 2,2’-bipyridine hinders the lifting of the reconstruction. Whereas the stripe separation increases continuously over a 0.6 V range in the base electrolyte, the presence of the organic compounds blocks this process considerably. Only a small, step-like increase in p is observed, where the adlayer is disordered. There exists a 0.7 V hysteresis between the lifting and the subsequent formation of the reconstruction. The(p x root 3) phase reappears at potentials where a ’gas-like’ adlayer is formed once again. Cyclic diffractograms and potential step measurements have been employed to study the time dependence of these substrate transitions for the system uracil/Au(111).
Keywords:SCANNING-TUNNELING-MICROSCOPY;ELECTRODE SURFACES;SINGLE-CRYSTALS;GOLD ATOMS;RECONSTRUCTION;ADSORPTION;INSITU;DEPENDENCE;INTERFACE;AU(100)