氧化铁表面

IF 8.2 1区 化学 Q1 CHEMISTRY, PHYSICAL
Gareth S. Parkinson
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Fe<sub>3</sub>O<sub>4</sub><span><span> is the most studied iron oxide in surface science<span>, primarily because its stability range corresponds nicely to the ultra-high vacuum environment. It is also an electrical conductor, which makes it straightforward to study with the most commonly used surface science methods such as photoemission<span> spectroscopies (XPS, UPS) and scanning tunneling microscopy (STM). The impact of the surfaces on the measurement of bulk properties such as </span></span></span>magnetism, the Verwey transition and the (predicted) half-metallicity is discussed.</span></p><p>The best understood iron oxide surface at present is probably Fe<sub>3</sub>O<sub>4</sub>(100); the structure is known with a high degree of precision and the major defects and properties are well characterised. A major factor in this is that a termination at the Fe<sub>oct</sub>–O plane can be reproducibly prepared by a variety of methods, as long as the surface is annealed in 10<sup>−7</sup>−10<sup>−5</sup> <!-->mbar O<sub>2</sub> in the final stage of preparation. Such straightforward preparation of a monophase termination is generally not the case for iron oxide surfaces. All available evidence suggests the oft-studied (√2×√2)R45° reconstruction results from a rearrangement of the cation lattice in the outermost unit cell in which two octahedral cations are replaced by one tetrahedral interstitial, a motif conceptually similar to well-known Koch–Cohen defects in Fe<sub>1−<em>x</em></sub>O. The cation deficiency results in Fe<sub>11</sub>O<sub>16</sub><span> stoichiometry, which is in line with the chemical potential in ultra-high vacuum (UHV), which is close to the border between the Fe</span><sub>3</sub>O<sub>4</sub> and Fe<sub>2</sub>O<sub>3</sub> phases. The Fe<sub>3</sub>O<sub>4</sub>(111) surface is also much studied, but two different surface terminations exist close in energy and can coexist, which makes sample preparation and data interpretation somewhat tricky. Both the Fe<sub>3</sub>O<sub>4</sub>(100) and Fe<sub>3</sub>O<sub>4</sub>(111) surfaces exhibit Fe-rich terminations as the sample selvedge becomes reduced. The Fe<sub>3</sub>O<sub>4</sub>(110) surface forms a one-dimensional (1×3) reconstruction linked to nanofaceting, which exposes the more stable Fe<sub>3</sub>O<sub>4</sub>(111) surface. α-Fe<sub>2</sub>O<sub>3</sub>(0001) is the most studied haematite surface, but difficulties preparing stoichiometric surfaces under UHV conditions have hampered a definitive determination of the structure. There is evidence for at least three terminations: a bulk-like termination at the oxygen plane, a termination with half of the cation layer, and a termination with ferryl groups. When the surface is reduced the so-called “bi-phase” structure is formed, which eventually transforms to a Fe<sub>3</sub>O<sub>4</sub>(111)-like termination. The structure of the bi-phase surface is controversial; a largely accepted model of coexisting Fe<sub>1−<em>x</em></sub>O and α-Fe<sub>2</sub>O<sub>3</sub><span>(0001) islands was recently challenged and a new structure based on a thin film of Fe</span><sub>3</sub>O<sub>4</sub>(111) on α-Fe<sub>2</sub>O<sub>3</sub>(0001) was proposed. The merits of the competing models are discussed. The α-Fe<sub>2</sub>O<sub>3</sub>(1<span><math><mover><mrow><mn>1</mn></mrow><mo>¯</mo></mover></math></span><span>02) “R-cut” surface is recommended as an excellent prospect for future study given its apparent ease of preparation and its prevalence in nanomaterial.</span></p><p>In the latter sections the literature regarding adsorption on iron oxides is reviewed. 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The Fe<sub>3</sub>O<sub>4</sub>(111) surface is also much studied, but two different surface terminations exist close in energy and can coexist, which makes sample preparation and data interpretation somewhat tricky. Both the Fe<sub>3</sub>O<sub>4</sub>(100) and Fe<sub>3</sub>O<sub>4</sub>(111) surfaces exhibit Fe-rich terminations as the sample selvedge becomes reduced. The Fe<sub>3</sub>O<sub>4</sub>(110) surface forms a one-dimensional (1×3) reconstruction linked to nanofaceting, which exposes the more stable Fe<sub>3</sub>O<sub>4</sub>(111) surface. α-Fe<sub>2</sub>O<sub>3</sub>(0001) is the most studied haematite surface, but difficulties preparing stoichiometric surfaces under UHV conditions have hampered a definitive determination of the structure. There is evidence for at least three terminations: a bulk-like termination at the oxygen plane, a termination with half of the cation layer, and a termination with ferryl groups. 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引用次数: 412

摘要

综述了氧化铁表面的研究现状,包括磁铁矿(Fe3O4)、磁赤铁矿(γ-Fe2O3)、赤铁矿(α-Fe2O3)和钨钛矿(Fe1−xO)。本文首先概述了氧化铁表面在腐蚀、催化、自旋电子学、磁性纳米颗粒(MNPs)、生物医学、光电化学水分解和地下水修复等方面的应用。然后简要介绍了材料的总体结构和性能;每种化合物都是基于一个紧密堆积的阴离子晶格,在间隙位置具有不同的铁离子分布和氧化态。体缺陷化学由阳离子空位和间隙(不是氧空位)主导,这为理解氧化铁表面提供了背景,氧化铁表面代表了还原和氧化过程的前沿。铁根据氧的化学势从体中扩散进出,有时在表面形成复杂的中间相。如α-Fe2O3在还原条件下采用Fe3O4类表面,Fe3O4在进一步还原条件下仍采用Fe1−xo类结构。认为已知的体积缺陷结构是建立氧化铁表面模型的一个很好的起点。本文对氧化铁低折射率表面的原子尺度结构进行了研究。Fe3O4是表面科学中研究最多的氧化铁,主要是因为它的稳定范围与超高真空环境很好地对应。它也是一种电导体,这使得它可以直接使用最常用的表面科学方法进行研究,如光电发射光谱(XPS, UPS)和扫描隧道显微镜(STM)。讨论了表面对体性能(如磁性、维维跃迁和(预测的)半金属丰度)测量的影响。目前了解最多的氧化铁表面可能是Fe3O4(100);该结构具有很高的精度,主要缺陷和性能也得到了很好的表征。其中一个主要因素是,只要在制备的最后阶段在10−7−10−5毫巴O2中对表面进行退火,Feoct-O平面上的终止可以通过各种方法重复制备。这种简单的单相终止制备通常不是氧化铁表面的情况。所有可用的证据表明,经常研究的(√2x√2)R45°重构是由最外层单元胞中阳离子晶格的重排引起的,其中两个八面体阳离子被一个四面体间隙取代,这是一个概念上类似于Fe1−xO中众所周知的Koch-Cohen缺陷的基序。阳离子缺乏导致Fe11O16的化学计量符合超高真空(UHV)下的化学势,接近Fe3O4和Fe2O3相的边界。Fe3O4(111)表面也有很多研究,但两种不同的表面末端存在能量接近且可以共存,这使得样品制备和数据解释有些棘手。Fe3O4(100)和Fe3O4(111)表面都表现出富铁末端,随着样品边缘的减少。Fe3O4(110)表面形成一维重建(1×3),与纳米表面连接,暴露出更稳定的Fe3O4(111)表面。α-Fe2O3(0001)是研究最多的赤铁矿表面,但在特高压条件下制备化学计量表面的困难阻碍了对其结构的确定。有证据表明至少有三种终止:一个在氧面上的体状终止,一个在一半阳离子层上的终止,一个在铁基上的终止。当表面还原时,形成所谓的“双相”结构,最终转变为Fe3O4(111)样端部。双相表面的结构存在争议;最近,人们对Fe1−xO和α-Fe2O3(0001)岛共存模型提出了挑战,提出了一种基于Fe3O4(111)薄膜在α-Fe2O3(0001)上的新结构。讨论了各种竞争模型的优点。α-Fe2O3(11¯02)“R-cut”表面由于其明显的易于制备和在纳米材料中的普遍存在而被推荐为未来研究的极好前景。在后面的章节中,对氧化铁吸附的文献进行了综述。首先,讨论了分子(H2, H2O, CO, CO2, O2, HCOOH, CH3OH, CCl4, CH3I, C6H6, SO2, H2S,乙苯,苯乙烯和Alq3)的吸附,并试图将这些信息与氧化铁用作催化剂(水气转换,费托脱氢,乙苯脱氢成苯乙烯)或催化剂载体(CO氧化)的反应联系起来。描述了已知的氧化铁表面与金属的相互作用,并表明这种行为是由金属是否与氧化铁形成稳定的三元相决定的。那些不这样做的,(例如: Au, Pt, Ag, Pd)倾向于形成三维粒子,而其余的(Ni, Co, Mn, Cr, V, Cu, Ti, Zr, Sn, Li, K, Na, Ca, Rb, Cs, Mg, Ca)则在氧化物晶格内结合。掺入温度与最稳定的金属氧化物的形成热成正比。本文特别强调了Fe3O4表面上分离金属附着原子异常热稳定性的机制,并讨论了该模型系统在理解单原子催化和亚纳米簇催化方面的潜在应用。回顾以一个简短的总结结束,并提供了一个前景,包括令人兴奋的未来研究方向。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Iron oxide surfaces

The current status of knowledge regarding the surfaces of the iron oxides, magnetite (Fe3O4), maghemite (γ-Fe2O3), haematite (α-Fe2O3), and wüstite (Fe1−xO) is reviewed. The paper starts with a summary of applications where iron oxide surfaces play a major role, including corrosion, catalysis, spintronics, magnetic nanoparticles (MNPs), biomedicine, photoelectrochemical water splitting and groundwater remediation. The bulk structure and properties are then briefly presented; each compound is based on a close-packed anion lattice, with a different distribution and oxidation state of the Fe cations in interstitial sites. The bulk defect chemistry is dominated by cation vacancies and interstitials (not oxygen vacancies) and this provides the context to understand iron oxide surfaces, which represent the front line in reduction and oxidation processes. Fe diffuses in and out from the bulk in response to the O2 chemical potential, forming sometimes complex intermediate phases at the surface. For example, α-Fe2O3 adopts Fe3O4-like surfaces in reducing conditions, and Fe3O4 adopts Fe1−xO-like structures in further reducing conditions still. It is argued that known bulk defect structures are an excellent starting point in building models for iron oxide surfaces.

The atomic-scale structure of the low-index surfaces of iron oxides is the major focus of this review. Fe3O4 is the most studied iron oxide in surface science, primarily because its stability range corresponds nicely to the ultra-high vacuum environment. It is also an electrical conductor, which makes it straightforward to study with the most commonly used surface science methods such as photoemission spectroscopies (XPS, UPS) and scanning tunneling microscopy (STM). The impact of the surfaces on the measurement of bulk properties such as magnetism, the Verwey transition and the (predicted) half-metallicity is discussed.

The best understood iron oxide surface at present is probably Fe3O4(100); the structure is known with a high degree of precision and the major defects and properties are well characterised. A major factor in this is that a termination at the Feoct–O plane can be reproducibly prepared by a variety of methods, as long as the surface is annealed in 10−7−10−5 mbar O2 in the final stage of preparation. Such straightforward preparation of a monophase termination is generally not the case for iron oxide surfaces. All available evidence suggests the oft-studied (√2×√2)R45° reconstruction results from a rearrangement of the cation lattice in the outermost unit cell in which two octahedral cations are replaced by one tetrahedral interstitial, a motif conceptually similar to well-known Koch–Cohen defects in Fe1−xO. The cation deficiency results in Fe11O16 stoichiometry, which is in line with the chemical potential in ultra-high vacuum (UHV), which is close to the border between the Fe3O4 and Fe2O3 phases. The Fe3O4(111) surface is also much studied, but two different surface terminations exist close in energy and can coexist, which makes sample preparation and data interpretation somewhat tricky. Both the Fe3O4(100) and Fe3O4(111) surfaces exhibit Fe-rich terminations as the sample selvedge becomes reduced. The Fe3O4(110) surface forms a one-dimensional (1×3) reconstruction linked to nanofaceting, which exposes the more stable Fe3O4(111) surface. α-Fe2O3(0001) is the most studied haematite surface, but difficulties preparing stoichiometric surfaces under UHV conditions have hampered a definitive determination of the structure. There is evidence for at least three terminations: a bulk-like termination at the oxygen plane, a termination with half of the cation layer, and a termination with ferryl groups. When the surface is reduced the so-called “bi-phase” structure is formed, which eventually transforms to a Fe3O4(111)-like termination. The structure of the bi-phase surface is controversial; a largely accepted model of coexisting Fe1−xO and α-Fe2O3(0001) islands was recently challenged and a new structure based on a thin film of Fe3O4(111) on α-Fe2O3(0001) was proposed. The merits of the competing models are discussed. The α-Fe2O3(11¯02) “R-cut” surface is recommended as an excellent prospect for future study given its apparent ease of preparation and its prevalence in nanomaterial.

In the latter sections the literature regarding adsorption on iron oxides is reviewed. First, the adsorption of molecules (H2, H2O, CO, CO2, O2, HCOOH, CH3OH, CCl4, CH3I, C6H6, SO2, H2S, ethylbenzene, styrene, and Alq3) is discussed, and an attempt is made to relate this information to the reactions in which iron oxides are utilized as a catalyst (water–gas shift, Fischer–Tropsch, dehydrogenation of ethylbenzene to styrene) or catalyst supports (CO oxidation). The known interactions of iron oxide surfaces with metals are described, and it is shown that the behaviour is determined by whether the metal forms a stable ternary phase with the iron oxide. Those that do not, (e.g. Au, Pt, Ag, Pd) prefer to form three-dimensional particles, while the remainder (Ni, Co, Mn, Cr, V, Cu, Ti, Zr, Sn, Li, K, Na, Ca, Rb, Cs, Mg, Ca) incorporate within the oxide lattice. The incorporation temperature scales with the heat of formation of the most stable metal oxide. A particular effort is made to underline the mechanisms responsible for the extraordinary thermal stability of isolated metal adatoms on Fe3O4 surfaces, and the potential application of this model system to understand single atom catalysis and sub-nano cluster catalysis is discussed. The review ends with a brief summary, and a perspective is offered including exciting lines of future research.

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来源期刊
Surface Science Reports
Surface Science Reports 化学-物理:凝聚态物理
CiteScore
15.90
自引率
2.00%
发文量
9
审稿时长
178 days
期刊介绍: Surface Science Reports is a journal that specializes in invited review papers on experimental and theoretical studies in the physics, chemistry, and pioneering applications of surfaces, interfaces, and nanostructures. The topics covered in the journal aim to contribute to a better understanding of the fundamental phenomena that occur on surfaces and interfaces, as well as the application of this knowledge to the development of materials, processes, and devices. In this journal, the term "surfaces" encompasses all interfaces between solids, liquids, polymers, biomaterials, nanostructures, soft matter, gases, and vacuum. Additionally, the journal includes reviews of experimental techniques and methods used to characterize surfaces and surface processes, such as those based on the interactions of photons, electrons, and ions with surfaces.
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