The chemical bonding of three different anhydride and carboxylic acid based compounds with a set of differently prepared aluminum substrates has been investigated using infrared reflection absorption spectroscopy. The compounds were selected to model typically used adhesives, coatings, and self-assembling monolayers. The purpose of the investigation was to study the interaction of these functional groups with the aluminum oxide surface and to determine whether this interaction is influenced by the changes in chemistry and composition of the oxide layer. The extent to which the compounds resisted disbondment in water was also investigated. The oxide layers on the differently prepared substrates were all found to be capable of hydrolysis of the anhydride group, resulting in the formation of two carboxylic acid groups. Subsequently, both of the carboxylic acid groups became deprotonated, to form a coordinatively bonded carboxylate species. The same behavior was also observed for monofunctional carboxylic acids. For all different oxides layers, the carboxylate was found to be coordinated in a bridging bidentate way to two aluminum cations in the oxide layer. The oxide layers showed however clear differences in the amount of molecules being chemisorbed. A relation was established with the amount of hydroxyls present on their surfaces, as determined from X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy measurements. The coordinative bonding of a monofunctional carboxylic acid group to the oxide surface was found to be not stable in the presence of water, while a bifunctional carboxylic acid group could resist displacement by water for a prolonged period of time.
The localized acid−base properties of different, aluminum oxide thin layer surfaces have been evaluated
with X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS). Five types of oxide layers were studied, which were produced
by oxidizing aluminum in a vacuum, with an alkaline and acidic pretreatment, and in boiling water. The
photoelectron core level binding energies, as measured with XPS, are evaluated for this purpose, while taking
into consideration the initial and final state effects. For the structurally comparable oxides, the shifts in the
O 1s binding energies are determined by their initial state chemistry. The values of the O 1s binding energy
can be directly related to the surface-averaged charge on the O anions. For the Al cations, a correlation
between the photoelectron core level binding energy shift and changes in the initial state chemistry was
observed, but the Al 2p binding energy shifts were found to be partially due to changes in extra-atomic
relaxation. The measured Al 2p binding energies and the binding energies of the resolved OH and O components
in the O 1s peak showed that the studied aluminum oxides have OH sites with the same Brönsted/Lewis
acid−base properties, O sites with the same Lewis base properties, and Al sites with very similar Lewis acid
properties. The pseudoboehmite oxide, obtained by boiling aluminum in water, exhibits more basic O, OH,
and Al sites. This oxide deviates structurally from the other oxides studied, resulting in a lower extra-atomic
relaxation and Madelung potential contribution to the binding energies.
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