Publications by authors named "Denis V Potapenko"

Acetic acid adsorption and reactions at multiple surface coverage values on Ni(110) were studied with temperature-programmed desorption (TPD) and infrared reflection absorption spectroscopy (IRAS) at 90-500 K. The experimental measurements were interpreted with density functional theory (DFT) calculations that provided information on adsorbate geometries, energies, and vibrational modes. Below the monolayer saturation coverage of 0.

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Scanning electrochemical microscopy (SECM) has previously been employed in probing photoelectrochemical processes at semiconductor surfaces. However, the spatial resolution of these studies has not yet matched the nanoscale SECM resolution attained without substrate illumination. Herein, we introduce nanoscale photo-SECM with a glass-sealed, polished tip simultaneously serving as a nanoelectrode and a light guide to produce a microscopic light spot on the substrate surface.

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The application of elastic lattice strain is a promising approach for tuning material properties, but the attainment of a systematic approach for introducing a high level of strain in materials so as to study its effects has been a major challenge. Here we create an array of intense locally varying strain fields on a TiO2 (110) surface by introducing highly pressurized argon nanoclusters at 6-20 monolayers under the surface. By combining scanning tunneling microscopy imaging and the continuum mechanics model, we show that strain causes the surface bridge-bonded oxygen vacancies (BBOv), which are typically present on this surface, to be absent from the strained area and generates defect-free regions.

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Arrays of highly strained 5-25 nm-wide regions have been prepared on rutile TiO2(110) surface through a low energy Ar ion bombardment technique. Using scanning tunneling microscopy (STM) and an innovative STM tip-triggered nanoexplosion approach we show experimentally that the protrusions arise from subsurface Ar-filled pockets. Continuum mechanics modeling gives good estimates of the corresponding elastic deformation.

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Ti-Au surface alloy oxidation is used to form nanocrystals of TiO(2) on Au(111). In situ scanning tunneling microscopy (STM) studies show that the approach yields arrays of 8-11 nm wide crystals with relatively narrow size dispersion and uniform crystallography. STM imaging shows that their crystallographic form is rutile with a triangular or hexagonal geometry.

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We report on an scanning tunneling microscopy study of the nanocrystallite phases of TiO(2) formed via reactive-layer-assisted deposition in ultrahigh vacuum. The synthesis used reaction of a thin layer of water, on a Au(111) substrate at 130 K, with low-coverage vapor-deposited Ti. The effects of annealing temperature and reactant coverage were investigated.

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Temperature programmed desorption (TPD), Auger electron spectroscopy (AES), X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS), and scanning tunneling microscopy (STM) have been used to characterize molybdenum carbide nanoparticles prepared on a Au(111) substrate. The MoC(x) nanoparticles were formed by Mo metal deposition onto a reactive multilayer of ethylene, which was physisorbed on a Au(111) substrate at low temperatures (<100 K). The resulting clusters have an average diameter of approximately 1.

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