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Journal ArticleDOI

Oxidation of gold by ultraviolet light and ozone at 25 °C

David E. King
- 01 May 1995 - 
- Vol. 13, Iss: 3, pp 1247-1253
TLDR
In this article, the authors found that gold surfaces are oxidized by a combination of UV light and ozone generated from a mercury lamp, and the oxide layer was found to be 17±4 A-thick by variable angle XPS depth profiling.
Abstract
Gold surfaces have been found to be hydrophilic only after exhaustive preparation and with the ultimate care in sample preparation and treatment. The use of a combination of ultraviolet (UV) light and ozone has been described as a viable method of producing a clean, hydrophilic, gold surface. We have found that gold surfaces, which have been either stored in the laboratory after vacuum deposition or purchased as high purity standards, are oxidized by a combination of UV light and ozone generated from a mercury lamp. The samples were characterized with x‐ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS) and ion scattering spectroscopy (ISS) prior to and after exposure to UV/ozone in a stainless steel box in laboratory air. After the cleaning process gold surfaces were found by XPS to contain less carbon and to be enriched in oxygen. The O 1s on the cleaned surface, which was not present on the untreated surface, consisted of two peaks that are attributed to gold oxide and hydroxyl. The oxide layer was found to be 17±4 A thick by variable angle XPS depth profiling with an initial stoichiometry of Au2O3. The oxide was found to be stable to extended exposure to UHV and water and ethanol rinses. ISS compositional depth profiles confirmed the oxide layer thickness and that the hydrated surface layer is removed in the initial sputtering of the oxidized gold. Implications of these results related to the mechanism of self‐assembly of thiols on gold are discussed.

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Benchmarking Cellulose Nanocrystals: From the Laboratory to Industrial Production

TL;DR: Of the sulfuric acid-extracted C NCs examined, industrially produced material compared well with laboratory-made CNCs, exhibiting similar charge density, colloidal and thermal stability, crystallinity, morphology, and self-assembly behavior, suggesting that the evolution to commercial-scale applications will not be hindered by CNC production.
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Adsorption of oxygen on Au(111) by exposure to ozone

TL;DR: In this paper, the adsorbed oxygen layer by AES, XPS, HREELS, LEED, work function measurements and TPDP was studied, and it was shown that the desorption of O 2 from Au(111) can be described by first-order kinetics with an activation energy for O 2 depletions of 30 kcal−1 near saturation coverage.
Journal ArticleDOI

Self-Assembled Monolayers on Oxidized Metals. 2. Gold Surface Oxidative Pretreatment, Monolayer Properties, and Depression Formation

TL;DR: In this article, a new procedure for obtaining clea... is introduced for obtaining crystal-free self-assembly of organic monolayers onto gold surfaces, which is known to be influenced by the surface conditions prior to monolayer adsorption.
Journal ArticleDOI

Structure and surface chemistry of gold-based model catalysts.

TL;DR: Other Reactions Rettner and Auerbach studied the reaction dynamics of H atoms with Cl chemisorbed (via Cl2 decomposition at 400 K) on Au(111) employing molecular beam time-of-flight methods with quantum-state-specific detection and revealed the concurrence of two dynamically distinct mechanisms (Eley Rideal and Langmuir Hinshelwood) during the reaction.
Journal ArticleDOI

Influence of a Terminal Functionality on the Physical Properties of Surfactant-Stabilized Gold Nanoparticles

TL;DR: The physical properties of the surfactant-coated nanoparticles, both in solution and as thin films, were found to be dependent upon the nature of the functional group X as discussed by the authors.
References
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Physical chemistry of surfaces

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors discuss the nature and properties of liquid interfaces, including the formation of a new phase, nucleation and crystal growth, and the contact angle of surfaces of solids.
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