Issue 3, 2024

Simulating high-pressure surface reactions with molecular beams

Abstract

Using a reactive molecular beam with high kinetic energy (Ekin), it is possible to speed gas–surface reactions involving high activation barriers (Eact), which would require elevated pressures (P0) if a random gas with a Maxwell–Boltzmann distribution is used. By simply computing the number of molecules that overcome the activation barrier in a random gas at P0 and in a molecular beam at Ekin = Eact, we establish an EkinP0 equivalence curve, through which we postulate that molecular beams are ideal tools to investigate gas–surface reactions that involve high activation energies. In particular, we foresee the use of molecular beams to simulate gas surface reactions within the industrial-range (>10 bar) using surface-sensitive ultra-high vacuum (UHV) techniques, such as X-ray photoemission spectroscopy (XPS). To test this idea, we revisit the oxidation of the Cu(111) surface combining O2 molecular beams and XPS experiments. By tuning the kinetic energy of the O2 beam in the range of 0.24–1 eV, we achieve the same sequence of surface oxides obtained in ambient pressure photoemission (AP-XPS) experiments, in which the Cu(111) surface was exposed to a random O2 gas up to 1 mbar. We observe the same surface oxidation kinetics as in the random gas, but with a much lower dose, close to the expected value derived from the equivalence curve.

Graphical abstract: Simulating high-pressure surface reactions with molecular beams

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
18 Oct 2023
Accepted
01 Dec 2023
First published
04 Dec 2023
This article is Open Access
Creative Commons BY-NC license

Phys. Chem. Chem. Phys., 2024,26, 1770-1776

Simulating high-pressure surface reactions with molecular beams

A. A. Taleb, F. Schiller, D. V. Vyalikh, J. María Pérez, S. V. Auras, D. Farías and J. E. Ortega, Phys. Chem. Chem. Phys., 2024, 26, 1770 DOI: 10.1039/D3CP05071H

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