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Advanced Power of Disappearance Potential Spectroscopy in the Adsorbed Species Identification Full article

Source Chemical Physics Research Developments
Monography, Nova Science Publishers, Inc. 2011. 292 c. ISBN 9781611220681. Scopus РИНЦ
Output data Year: 2011, Pages: 149-173 Pages count : 24
Authors Cholach A.R. 1
Affiliations
1 Boreskov Institute of Catalysis, Akademika Lavrentieva Ave. 5, Novosibirsk 630090, Russian Federation

Abstract: The novel potentialities of Disappearance Potential Spectroscopy for fundamental studies and practical application are highlighted. Electronic structure of the adsorbed species can be characterized properly from an extended spectra processing due to following reasons. First, because of the pronounced sensitivity of this technique to precious few top sample layers exactly those are responsible for the processes of adsorption and surface reactions. Second, due to availability of the novel kind of electron-solid interaction, namely the conjugate electron excitation developed recently from the model studies. The latter phenomenon consists in ordinary substrate core level excitation accompanied by electron transition from the valence state of adsorbed particle to vacuum level. This is displayed experimentally as a set of spectral satellites localized by the respective ionization potential above the Fermi level of a given substrate component. It enables to fingerprint the electronic valence state structure and thus to ascertain the chemical nature of adsorbed species of any complexity. It also gives potentiality to determine an exact location of adsorbed particle on the composite substrate surface.
Cite: Cholach A.R.
Advanced Power of Disappearance Potential Spectroscopy in the Adsorbed Species Identification
Monography chapter Chemical Physics Research Developments. – Nova Science Publishers, Inc., 2011. – C.149-173. – ISBN 9781611220681. Scopus РИНЦ ANCAN
Identifiers:
Scopus: 2-s2.0-84875201788
Elibrary: 21879295
Chemical Abstracts: 2013:77955
Chemical Abstracts (print): 158:458020
Citing:
DB Citing
Scopus 1
Elibrary 1