Applied Surface Science, Vol.257, No.20, 8542-8549, 2011
Investigation of oxygen states and reactivities on a nanostructured cupric oxide surface
Nanostructured copper (II) oxide was formed on clean copper foil at room temperature using activated oxygen produced by RF discharge. CuO particles of approximately 10-20 nm were observed on the surface by Scanning Tunneling Microscopy (STM). The copper states and oxygen species of the model cupric oxide were studied by means of X-ray Photoelectron Spectroscopy (XPS). These oxide particles demonstrated abnormally high reactivity with carbon monoxide (CO) at temperatures below 100 degrees C. The XPS data showed that the interaction of CO with the nanostructured cupric oxide resulted in reduction of the CuO particles to Cu2O species. The reactivity of the nanostructured cupric oxide to CO was studied at 80 degrees C using XPS in step-by-step mode. The initial reactivity was estimated to be 5 x 10(-5) and was steadily reduced down to 5 x 10(-9) as the exposure was increased. O1s spectral analysis allowed us to propose that the high initial reactivity was caused by the presence of non-lattice oxygen states on the surface of the nanostructured CuO. We established that reoxidation of the partially reduced nanostructured cupric oxide by molecular oxygen O-2 restored the highly reactive oxygen form on the surface. These results allowed us to propose that the nanostructured cupric oxide could be used for low temperature catalytic CO oxidation. Some hypotheses concerning the nature of the non-lattice oxygen species with high reactivity are also discussed. (C) 2011 Elsevier B. V. All rights reserved.