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Molecular Physics
An International Journal at the Interface Between Chemistry and Physics
Volume 108, 2010 - Issue 7-9: A Special Issue on Spectroscopy and Dynamics in Honour of Richard N. Zare
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Invited Articles

The sticking of H2(v = 1, J = 1) on Cu(100) measured using laser-induced thermal desorption

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Pages 1027-1032 | Received 15 Nov 2009, Accepted 08 Jan 2010, Published online: 01 Apr 2010
 

Abstract

The sticking of vibrationally excited H2 on Cu(100) is measured using molecular beam techniques and stimulated Raman scattering for state preparation. Laser Induced Thermal Desorption (LITD) is developed to measure surface hydrogen coverage by calibration with known H-coverages. We find that LITD can be effectively used to measure adsorbed hydrogen concentrations with a sensitivity of better that 1% of a monolayer. Sticking coefficients of H2 are determined from the ratio coverage to exposure. Measurements are made for H2 incident translational energies in the range of 74–189 meV. For the first excited vibrational state, we find and an upper limit of the H2 sticking coefficient to be 0.065 at E i = 74 meV and 0.17 at E i = 189 meV. These limits imply that previous measurements of loss of H2(v = 1) upon scattering from Cu(100) cannot be predominately a result of dissociative adsorption. The results are broadly consistent with results determined from quantum-state resolved measurements for recombinatative desorption and the principle of detailed balance for H2 from Cu(111).

Acknowledgements

We gratefully acknowledge support of this project under Grant No. CHE-0238224 and CHE-0718886 from the National Science Foundation.

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