4.6 Article

Formation of Environmentally Persistent Free Radicals (EPFRs) on the Phenol-Dosed α-Fe2O3 (0001) Surface

Journal

JOURNAL OF PHYSICAL CHEMISTRY C
Volume 125, Issue 40, Pages 21882-21890

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acs.jpcc.1c04298

Keywords

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Funding

  1. National Institute of Environmental Health Science Superfund Research Program [P42 ES013648-03]
  2. Dominican University of California's Lillian L.Y. Wang Yin, PhD Endowment

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XPS and UPS techniques were used to study the adsorption of phenol on metal oxide surfaces, revealing that at high temperatures, electron transfer and the formation of surface radicals occur.
Environmentally persistent free radicals (EPFRs) are a class of toxic air pollutants that are found to form by the chemisorption of substituted aromatic molecules on the surface of metal oxides. In this study, we employ X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS) and ultraviolet photoelectron spectroscopy (UPS) to perform a temperature-dependent study of phenol adsorption on alpha-Fe2O3 (0001) to probe the radical formation mechanism by monitoring changes in the electronic structure of both the adsorbed phenol and metal oxide substrate. Upon dosing at room temperature, new phenol-derived electronic states have been clearly observed in the UPS spectrum at saturation coverage. However, upon dosing at high temperature (>200 degrees C), both photoemission techniques have shown distinctive features that strongly suggest electron transfer from adsorbed phenol to Fe2O3 surface atoms and consequent formation of a surface radical. Consistent with the experiment, DFT calculations show that phenoxyl adsorption on the iron oxide surface at RT leads to a minor charge transfer to the adsorbed molecule. The experimental findings at high temperatures agree well with the EPFRs' proposed formation mechanism and can guide future experimental and computational studies.

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