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The adsorption of CO on Pt(111) was studied by picosecond infrared−visible sum frequency generation (SFG) vibrational spectroscopy in a pressure range from 10 -7 to 500 mbar and in a temperature range of 160−400 K. At low pressure the experiments were complemented by TPD, LEED, and AES. Terminally bonded (on-top) CO was the only species observed between 160 and 400 K, independent of gas pressure. The CO stretching frequency was blue-shifted by about 15 cm -1 with increasing pressure (up to 2097 cm -1 ), but no evidence for high-pressure CO species or surface roughening was found. The influence of defects was also investigated. CO adsorption on a defective (nonannealed) Pt(111) surface yielded peaks that were slightly broadened but otherwise identical to the defect-free surface. At 160 K, a second peak at 2085 cm -1 evolved above 50 mbar of CO. TPD revealed that under these conditions residual (contaminant) water adsorbs on the surface. The coadsorption of water and CO red-shifted the terminal CO peak by about 15 cm -1, resulting from the substrate-mediated interaction of CO and water.
Rupprechter et al. (Tue,) studied this question.
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