Title of article :
The use of direct recoil spectrometry (DRS) for the study of water vapor interactions on polycrystalline metallic surfaces—the H2O/U and H2O/Ti systems
Author/Authors :
M.H. Mintz، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2005
Pages :
8
From page :
633
To page :
640
Abstract :
Using direct recoil spectrometry (DRS), the shadowing of surface H atoms by neighboring O atoms can differentiate between full and partial dissociation routes of water molecules on the surface as well as point to the geometrical arrangements of hydroxyl surface groups. The H2O/U and H2O/Ti systems were compared. It has been found that different mechanisms control the water– surface interactions in these systems. For the H2O/U system, a simple direct-collision (Langmuir-type) dissociative chemisorption controls the process. Two consecutive stages were identified: (i) below 70% monolayer coverage, a complete dissociation of water into oxygen ion and two H atoms, which chemisorb on the remaining unreacted metallic surface and (ii) above about 70% of a full layer coverage, three dimensional oxide islands start to form, causing partial dissociation of water and the formation of surface hydroxyls. For the H2O/Ti system, a more complicated mechanism, which involves a precursor state, seems to control the process. In that case, two concurrent routes act simultaneously. In addition to the simple direct-collision mechanism, water precursor clusters (bound by hydrogen bonds), which partly dissociate, result in chemisorbed tilted hydroxyl clusters (even at low-coverage). The relative contributions of the precursor route and the direct-collision route are pressure dependent, with the former being dominant at higher exposure pressures.
Keywords :
DRS , H2O/U system , H2O/Ti system , H shadowing
Journal title :
Applied Surface Science
Serial Year :
2005
Journal title :
Applied Surface Science
Record number :
1001500
Link To Document :
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