| Literature DB >> 21505500 |
K R Harikumar1, John C Polanyi, Amir Zabet-Khosousi, Piotr Czekala, Haiping Lin, Werner A Hofer.
Abstract
The recoil of adsorbates away (desorption) and towards (reaction) surfaces is well known. Here, we describe the long-range recoil of adsorbates in the plane of a surface, and accordingly the novel phenomenon of reactions occurring at a substantial distance from the originating event. Three thermal and three electron-induced surface reactions are shown by scanning tunnelling microscopy to propel their physisorbed ethylenic products across the rough surface of Si(100) over a distance of up to 200 Å before an attachment reaction. The recoil energy in the ethylenic products comes from thermal exoergicity or from electronic excitation of chemisorbed alkenes. We propose that the mechanism of migration is a rolling motion, because the recoiling molecule overcomes raised surface obstacles. Electronic excitation of propene causes directional recoil and often end-to-end inversion, suggesting cartwheeling. Ab initio calculations of the halogenation and electron-induced reactions support a model in which asymmetric forces between the molecule and the surface induce rotation and therefore migration.Entities:
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Year: 2011 PMID: 21505500 DOI: 10.1038/nchem.1029
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nat Chem ISSN: 1755-4330 Impact factor: 24.427