Photo physics and photo chemistry of ice films on graphite Department of Applied Physics Chalmers...

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Photo physics and photo chemistry of ice films on graphite Department of Applied Physics Chalmers and Göteborg University Dinko Chakarov Johan Bergeld Michael Gleeson Bengt Kasemo ……………

Transcript of Photo physics and photo chemistry of ice films on graphite Department of Applied Physics Chalmers...

Photo physics and photo chemistry of ice films on graphite

Department of Applied PhysicsChalmers and Göteborg University

Dinko ChakarovJohan Bergeld

Michael GleesonBengt Kasemo

……………

Key words:

• Photon induced processes• (UV - visible – IR)• Water ice (amorphous, crystalline, reactions)• Surfaces• Graphite • Spectroscopy

Experimental conditions:

° Atomically clean and ordered surfacesIce (H2O/D2O) on HOPG (XYA)

° UHV (below 10-10 torr)

° Temperature range 25 - 1500 K

° Photon fluxes (cw and pulsed)1012 - 1029 photons.s-1

° Arc lamps + filters/monochromator and/or Nd:YAG based OPO (220-1600 nm)

Experimental methods:

° HREELS ° TDS/ITS

° PID ° QCM

Ice - Optical / Electronic properties

Graphite: Electronic/Optical Propertieselectronic configuration: 2-4 or

1s22s22p2

a

Energy (eV)-20-15-10-505σππ∗σ∗EF

νhπsp2120o

Photon Energy (eV)

Ext

inct

ion

coef

fici

ent

J. Chem. Phys. 106 (3), 982, 1997

PHOTO DESORPTION OF ALKALI ATOMS

Graphite

Phenomena/Examples:

•Photoinduced structural changes in amorphous ice

•Photoejection of water molecules from amorphous ice

•Photoreactions: H2O & coadsorbates on graphite

HREELS; energeticsorientation

ITD; structrecoverages

TPD; binding energylateral interactions

0 100 200 300 400 500

0

Energy Loss, meV

x100

x333

Water on Graphite(0001) T=85 K

0

0.5

1

0 200 400 600 800

Time, s

2.2 MLTiso= 134 K

120 135 150 165 180

Temperature (K)

H2O/Graphite (0001)

(UHV and Low Temperatures)

Structure of Ice (Ic and Ih)Hydrogen bonding:

Ideal ice structures obey the so-called Bernal-Fowler rules:

each hydrogen atom (or proton) is situated on the line joining each pair of oxygens; each oxygen atom has two hydrogen atoms attached to it at distances of about 1Å, thereby forming a water molecule H2O.

Photoinduced crystallization• Experimental observations

0

5

10

15

0 50 100 150 200

Energy Loss, meV

x 50

x 1

D

C

B

A

9 meV

ν ννν2R 3R 4RT

2DH2Ogrowth 3DH2Ogrowth

low-coordinated watermoleculeshigher-coordinated watermolecules

hω0

0.2

0.4

0.6

0.8

1

0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7

nonirradiatedirradiated

Coverage, ML

0

0.5

1

1.5

2

0 1 2 3 4 5

crystalline amorphous

Photon dose x(1019

photons.cm-2

)

θH

2O= 2.2 ML

a

0-101b23a11b1

4a12b2 EFEVEg,iceΦGrVBiceVBGr

EF ΔΦCBGrEdππ∗12341/2

hωhω( )D E ( )D E

E ECBiceσGraphiteIce

EV

1. - .Photoexcitation of electron hole pairs in graphite2. T .unneling of the electron into unoccupied defect states near but below the CB edge of ice3. V .ibrational excitation4. .Return of the electron after the local ice structure has relaxed into higher coordination

Re-crystallization Mechanism

PR

L, 8

1 , 5

181

(19 9

9 )

Defects annealing

a

D-defectL-defect

N. Bjerrum, Structure and properties of ice,Science, 115, 385, 1951

Structural changes of ice films

0

0.5

1

0 200 400 600 800

Time, s

T = 134 K

Importance and Consequences

• Balance between adsorbed and gas phase water

• Reactivity of the ice surface

0 5 10 15 20Time [s]

H2O photoejection

2.4 ML film on GraphiteT=85 K

650 nm, 3.7 mJ

0

2 104

4 104

6 104

8 104

0 5 1016 1 1017 1.5 1017 2 1017

Photo peak vs. number of photons H2O/HOPG, ~5MLIllumination position between wavelengths might differ

l = 355 nmλ = 532 nm

= 1.7404 -47 * ^(3.1042) = 0.96769 y e x R

= 4.5075 -68 * ^(4.1701) = 0.99993 y e x R

, .Photon Flux Number of Photons cm2.s-1

0

1 104

2 104

3 104

4 104

5 104

0 5 10 15 20

Photoejection peak intensity for different

water coverages at ~50 K

Coverage [ML]

λ=355 , 1.2 .nm mJ cm2

Photoreactions with ice; investigated systems:

• Substrates: • Graphite, Si(001), Pt(111), …• Coadsorbates: • Metal ions and clusters: Na, K, Cs, Ag, Au

• Simple molecules: CO, NO, H2S

• Observed products:

• H2, CO, CO2, CH4, NH3, …

AM-stabilized H2O : TPD

Photoreactions of water and carbon at 90 K

J. Chem. Phys. 115 (20) 2001

Carbon/Graphite

- C

- O

- H

-25 0 25 50 75 100 125 150 175 200 2250

2000

4000

6000

8000

10000

12000

14000

16000

18000

Irradiation: 355 nm / 5.3 mJ (10x10 sec exposures)

NO

de

sorp

tion

Time (sec)

NO exposure ~12 LAg coverage

0,0 ML 0,3 ML 1,3 ML 2,2 ML

Photo-desorption as a function of Ag coverage

Summary:

•Photoinduced structural changes in amorphous ice

•Photoejection of water molecules from amorphous ice

•Photoreactions: H2O & coadsorbates on graphite

• Demonstrate the richness of the processes and phenomena;• Knowing the conditions is possible to identify the predominant process.