Abstract:
Transformations of the surface and bulk of nanoscale ytterbium films during the surface interactions of these films with different ligand molecules have been studied. It has been shown that a combination of two factors, i.e., the existence of a lone electron pair in CO and O$_2$ molecules and the unoccupied 5d level lying near the Fermi level in metallic divalent ytterbium, causes the formation of a stable chemisorption state of the molecule-nanofilm surface layer in which donor-acceptor bonds between gas molecules and surface metal ions are formed. As a result, ytterbium on the surface and in the bulk of the nanofilm is oxidized to a non-autonomous trivalent electronic state. The depth to which this transition propagates in the nanofilm has been determined; its anomalously large value (from 9 to 22 layers according to different estimates) has been explained. It has also been shown that the ligand molecule layer on the ytterbium surface is filled in two stages. The two-stage mechanism of this process is reflected by the nonmonotonic behavior of concentration dependences of the work function of CO–Yb and O$_2$–Yb structures.