Mark W. Dowley
Solid State Communications
Fluorescence detected surface extended x-ray absorption fine structure (EXAFS) has been used to probe the structure of underpotentially deposited Ag on a Au(111) surface from an aqueous solution using sodium perchlorate as the electrolyte. Silver is shown to be fully reduced on the surface with observed bond distances of 2.88 + 0.025 A and 2.91 + 0.025 A for silver-silver and silver-gold near neighbors, respectively. Data is obtained with the polarization of the incident x-ray beam both parallel and perpendicular to the electrode surface. From this, we show that the silver monolayer is (1 x 1) commensurate with the substrate and that the Ag ad-atoms occupy three-fold hollow sites. In addition to backscattering from gold and silver near neighbors, backscattering from oxygen, presumably adsorbed water is observed. We have studied this at different electrode potentials (+0.7, +0.5, -0.1 V us. Ag/AgCl). At all three potentials the measured silver-oxygen distance is the same: 2.21 ± 0.025 A. This is contrasted to another system where this previously has been studied, Pb on Ag(111) where the metal-oxygen distance varies with applied potential. © 1993, The Electrochemical Society, Inc. All rights reserved.
Mark W. Dowley
Solid State Communications
S.F. Fan, W.B. Yun, et al.
Proceedings of SPIE 1989
A. Ney, R. Rajaram, et al.
Journal of Magnetism and Magnetic Materials
P.C. Pattnaik, D.M. Newns
Physical Review B