Journal of Physical Chemistry B, Vol.109, No.6, 2302-2306, 2005
Interfacial oxidation of ultrathin nickel and chromium films on yttria-stabilized zirconia
The substrate-induced oxidation upon prolonged annealing in UHV of ultrathin films of Ni and Cr vapor deposited on yttria-stabilized zirconia YSZ(100) was studied by X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS) to obtain information about the oxidation mechanism, determine the available quantity of reactive oxygen in YSZ, and investigate the thermal stability of the thin oxide films. Up to about 0.8 ML of Ni deposited at room temperature was oxidized to NiO at a constant rate at 650 K via the substrate, whereas at slightly higher coverage, the oxidation rate under identical conditions was drastically reduced. In contrast to Ni, up to 4.8 ML of Cr deposited at 275 K could be oxidized via the substrate to Cr2O3 upon extensive UHV annealing at increasing temperature up to 820 K, indicating a reactive oxygen content of at least 4 x 10(-6) with respect to the lattice oxygen in the YSZ specimen. The Cr2O3 decomposed to metallic Cr above about 800 K, whereas NiO was stable up to the maximum temperature of 875 K. These results indicate that the oxidation via the substrate is kinetically analogous to the gas-phase oxidation of bulk Ni and Cr. The reactive oxygen content of the single-crystal YSZ is larger than expected, and part of it is accommodated at the surface of the substrate. The thermal stability of the thin oxide films is determined by the oxygen exchange with YSZ and not by the respective bulk oxide thermodynamic decomposition temperature.