Gold Surface Atoms Rearrange to Slow Oxidation
Researchers found that gold atoms on freshly exposed surfaces shift from square to hexagonal arrangements. This change makes splitting oxygen molecules far more difficult. The study was published May 21 in Physical Review Letters.
Science NewsAtoms on the surface of gold rearrange into a hexagonal geometry that hinders oxidation, the process that causes many metals to tarnish. Without that rearrangement, gold would begin to oxidize in seconds, researchers report May 21 in Physical Review Letters. For a metal to become oxidized, it must first split the surrounding air’s oxygen molecules, which each consist of two oxygen atoms.
Then the oxygen atoms can form compounds that stick to the surface of the metal. So the researchers calculated how well gold’s surfaces could split oxygen. Once a new surface of gold is exposed, for example by cutting it, atoms shift from their original arrangement within the lattice of atoms, a process called reconstruction.
Different arrangements of atoms can occur on gold’s exterior, and the researchers studied two common ones, for which atoms are originally laid out in squares, but reconstruct into hexagons. Based on quantum mechanical calculations, the researchers found that the square arrangement was much better at splitting oxygen than the hexagonal one.
In order for the hexagonal structure to split oxygen, it would first need to distort back into the original square shape, a hurdle that forestalls oxidation.
Gold oxide itself is unstable, so even if the square arrangement could be maintained under certain conditions, the material would likely form only a thin layer of oxide, says chemical engineer Matthew Montemore, a coauthor of the study. Just how much more reticent the reconstructed gold was to oxidize was “definitely a surprise,” says Montemore, of Tulane University in New Orleans.
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