RESUMO
The surface structure and reaction pathways of 7-octenoic acid are studied on a clean copper substrate in ultrahigh vacuum using a combination of reflection-absorption infrared spectroscopy, X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy, temperature-programmed desorption and scanning-tunneling microscopy, supplemented by first-principles density functional theory calculations. 7-Octenoic acid adsorbs molecularly on copper below â¼260 K in a flat-lying configuration at low coverages, becoming more upright as the coverage increases. It deprotonates following adsorption at â¼300 K to form an η2-7-octenoate species. This also lies flat at low coverages, but forms a more vertical self-assembled monolayer as the coverage increases. Heating causes the 7-octenoate species to start to tilt, which produces a small amount of carbon dioxide at â¼550 K and some hydrogen in a peak at â¼615 K ascribed to the reaction of these tilted species. The majority of the decarbonylation occurs at â¼650 K when CO2 and hydrogen evolve simultaneously. Approximately half of the carbon is deposited on the surface as oligomeric species that undergo further dehydrogenation to evolve more hydrogen at â¼740 K. This leaves a carbonaceous layer on the surface, which contains hexagonal motifs connoting the onset of graphitization of the surface.
RESUMO
The mechanochemical reaction kinetics of sulfur with copper to form a metastable copper sulfide phase at room temperature is investigated in ultrahigh vacuum by modifying the properties of the copper during cleaning in vacuum. The measured kinetics is in agreement with a theory first proposed by Karthikeyan and Rigney that predicts that the rate depends linearly both on the contact time and on the strain-rate sensitivity of the substrate. The mechanism for this process was investigated using thin samples of copper fabricated using a focused-ion-beam and by measuring the crystal structure and elemental composition of the copper subsurface region by electron microscopy after reaction. The measured sulfur depth distributions produced by shear-induced surface-to-bulk transport were in good agreement with values calculated using rate constants that also model the reaction kinetics. Sulfur was found both in crystalline regions and also concentrated along grain boundaries, implying that formation of metastable phases is facilitated by both the presence of dislocations and by grain boundaries.
RESUMO
Quasi-static density functional theory calculations of the rate of mechanochemical decomposition of methyl thiolate species adsorbed on Cu(100) accurately reproduce the experimental normal-stress dependent rates measured in ultrahigh vacuum by an atomic force microscopy tip. This allows precise analytical models for mechanochemical reaction kinetics to be developed.
RESUMO
Design principles are demonstrated for fabricating molecular electronic circuits using the inherently self-limiting growth of molecular wires between gold nanoparticles from the oligomerization of 1,4-phenylene diisocyanide.