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Bond-selective control of a gas-surface reaction

Posted on:2008-06-07Degree:Ph.DType:Dissertation
University:Tufts UniversityCandidate:Killelea, Daniel RFull Text:PDF
GTID:1451390005480202Subject:Chemistry
Abstract/Summary:
The prospect of using light to selectively control chemical reactions has tantalized chemists since the development of the laser. Unfortunately, the realization of laser-directed chemistry is frequently thwarted by the randomization of energy within the molecule through intramolecular vibrational energy distribution (IVR). However, recent results showing vibrational mode-specific reactivity on metal surfaces suggest that IVR may not always be complete for gas-surface reactions. Here, we combine molecular beam techniques and direct laser excitation to characterize the bond-specific reactivity of trideuteromethane on a Ni(111) surface. Our results reveal important details about how vibrational energy is distributed in the reactive molecule.; We use a molecular beam to direct state-selected trideuteromethane (CHD 3) molecules onto a nickel single crystal sample and use the results we obtain to describe the flow of vibrational energy in the methane-surface reaction complex. We show that CHD3 molecules initially excited to v=1, J=2, K=0 of the v 1 symmetric C-H stretching mode will dissociate exclusively via C-H cleavage on Ni(111). This result highlights the localization of vibrational energy in the reaction complex, despite the presence of many energy exchange channels with the high state-density surface. We demonstrate, for the first time, highly parallel bond-selective control of a heterogeneously catalyzed reaction.; We place our results in the context of recent experiments investigating IVR for molecules in both the gas phase and liquid solutions. If IVR is fast on the reaction timescale, vibrational energy would be randomly distributed throughout the nascent methane-surface reaction complex and vibrational mode-specific behavior would not occur. The short timescale of a direct gas-surface collision may explain how the exchange of energy via IVR is limited to only a small subset of the energetic configurations available to the reaction complex. This framework rationalizes the observation of vibrational mode-specific and bond-selective behavior and the surface-temperature dependence of direct gas-surface reactions. It also guides predictions for behavior of gas-surface reactions.; We also present results that use IR laser excitation of CH4 in the molecular beam to control the isotopic distribution of the reaction products. By exciting one quanta of the 13CH4 v 3 antisymmetric stretch in our methane molecular beam, we enhance the deposition of 13C on the nickel substrate. We also present results indicating the effect surface temperature has on the dissociation probability of vibrationally excited methane molecules.
Keywords/Search Tags:Reaction, Surface, Vibrational, Results, IVR, Bond-selective, Molecular beam, Molecules
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