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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Chadwick, H., Zhang, G., Baker, C. J., Smith, P. L., Alexandrowicz, G.
Format: Preprint
Published: 2024
Subjects:
Online Access:https://arxiv.org/abs/2410.01005
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author Chadwick, H.
Zhang, G.
Baker, C. J.
Smith, P. L.
Alexandrowicz, G.
author_facet Chadwick, H.
Zhang, G.
Baker, C. J.
Smith, P. L.
Alexandrowicz, G.
contents When hydrogen molecules collide with a surface, they can either scatter away from the surface or stick to the surface through a dissociation reaction which leaves two H atoms adsorbed on the surface. The relative probabilities of these two potential outcomes can depend on the rotational orientation of the impinging molecules, however, direct measurements of this dependence were not available due to the difficulty of controlling the rotational orientation of ground state H2 molecules. Here, we use magnetic manipulation to achieve rotational orientation control of the molecules just before they collide with the surface, and show that molecules approaching the surface in a helicopter orientation have a higher probability to react and dissociate, whereas those which approach in a cartwheel orientation are more likely to scatter.
format Preprint
id arxiv_https___arxiv_org_abs_2410_01005
institution arXiv
publishDate 2024
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle Anticorrelated stereodynamics of scattering and sticking of H2 molecules colliding with a reactive surface
Chadwick, H.
Zhang, G.
Baker, C. J.
Smith, P. L.
Alexandrowicz, G.
Chemical Physics
When hydrogen molecules collide with a surface, they can either scatter away from the surface or stick to the surface through a dissociation reaction which leaves two H atoms adsorbed on the surface. The relative probabilities of these two potential outcomes can depend on the rotational orientation of the impinging molecules, however, direct measurements of this dependence were not available due to the difficulty of controlling the rotational orientation of ground state H2 molecules. Here, we use magnetic manipulation to achieve rotational orientation control of the molecules just before they collide with the surface, and show that molecules approaching the surface in a helicopter orientation have a higher probability to react and dissociate, whereas those which approach in a cartwheel orientation are more likely to scatter.
title Anticorrelated stereodynamics of scattering and sticking of H2 molecules colliding with a reactive surface
topic Chemical Physics
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2410.01005