The interaction of CO molecules adsorbed on Au-Rh bimetallic nanoclusters supported on an ordered thin film of Al 2 O 3 /NiAl(100) was studied, primarily with infrared reflection absorption spectroscopy and densityfunctional-theory calculations. The bimetallic clusters, grown by sequential deposition of vapor Au and Rh onto the Al 2 O 3 /NiAl(100) surface at 300 K, had diameters of 1.2-3.0 nm and heights of 0.4-1.2 nm; they had a fcc phase and grew in the orientation (100). The infrared absorption line for CO adsorbed on Au sites (CO Au ) of the bimetallic clusters at 110 K was narrow (centered about 2100 cm
À1) and intense, which results largely from the small adsorption energy and large dipole moment of CO Au , whereas that on Rh sites (CO Rh ) was broad (1880-2100 cm
À1) and weak, which contrasts also with its counterpart on pure Rh clusters. Upon increasing the temperature to remove CO Au , the absorption line for CO Rh narrowed and the intensity increased; at 300 K, the line width decreased by 30-40% and the absorption intensity was enhanced by 40-60%. The former arose, after the desorption of CO Au , from a decreased CO-CO interaction and inhomogeneous broadening; the latter corresponded to an enhanced dipole moment of CO Rh , attributed to a promoted charge transfer from the CO Rh -binding Rh to the neighboring Au and consequently increased charge donated from CO Rh to Rh. The varied IR absorption for adsorbed CO can thus serve as an indicator for the charge transfer between the components in bimetallic clusters.