State-resolved velocity map imaging of surface-scattered molecular flux

This work describes a novel surface-scattering technique which combines resonance enhanced multiphoton ionization (REMPI) with velocity-map imaging (VMI) to yield quantum-state and 2D velocity component resolved distributions in the scattered molecular flux. As an initial test system, we explore hyp...

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Veröffentlicht in:Physical chemistry chemical physics : PCCP 2012-03, Vol.14 (12), p.47-48
Hauptverfasser: Roscioli, J. R, Bell, D. J, Nelson, D. J, Nesbitt, D. J
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:This work describes a novel surface-scattering technique which combines resonance enhanced multiphoton ionization (REMPI) with velocity-map imaging (VMI) to yield quantum-state and 2D velocity component resolved distributions in the scattered molecular flux. As an initial test system, we explore hyperthermal scattering ( E inc = 21(5) kcal mol 1 ) of jet cooled HCl from Au(111) on atomically flat mica surfaces at 500 K. The resulting images reveal 2D ( v in-plane and v out-of-plane ) velocity distributions dominated by two primary features: trapping/thermal-desorption (TD) and a hyperthermal, impulsively scattering (IS) distribution. In particular, the IS component is strongly forward scattered and largely resolved in the velocity map images, which allows us to probe correlations between rotational and translational degrees of freedom in the IS flux without any model dependent deconvolution from the TD fraction. These correlations reveal that HCl molecules which have undergone a large decrease in velocity parallel to scattering plane have actually gained the most rotational energy, reminiscent of a dynamical energy constraint between these two degrees of freedom. The data are reduced to a rotational energy map that correlates E rot with velocity along and normal to the scattering plane, revealing that exchange occurs primarily between rotation and the in-plane kinetic energy component, with v out-of-plane playing a relatively minor role. Velocity-map imaging and quantum state-resolved ionization are used in conjunction with surface-scattering techniques to yield new insights into the dynamics of gassurface interactions.
ISSN:1463-9076
1463-9084
DOI:10.1039/c1cp22938a