| Literature DB >> 29341710 |
Zongfang Wu1, Agata Płucienik1, Felix E Feiten1, Matthias Naschitzki1, Walter Wachsmann1, Sandy Gewinner1, Wieland Schöllkopf1, Volker Staemmler2, Helmut Kuhlenbeck1, Hans-Joachim Freund1.
Abstract
Vibrational action spectroscopy employing infrared radiation from a free-electron laser has been successfully used for many years to study the vibrational and structural properties of gas phase aggregates. Despite the high sensitivity of this method no relevant studies have yet been conducted for solid sample surfaces. We have set up an experiment for the application of this method to such targets, using infrared light from the free-electron laser of the Fritz Haber Institute. In this Letter, we present first results of this technique with adsorbed argon and neon atoms as messengers. We were able to detect surface-located vibrations of a thin V_{2}O_{3}(0001) film on Au(111) as well as adsorbate vibrations, demonstrating that this method is highly surface sensitive. We consider that the dominant channel for desorption of the messenger atoms is direct inharmonic vibrational coupling, which is essentially insensitive to subsurface or bulk vibrations. Another channel is thermal desorption due to sample heating by absorption of infrared light. The high surface sensitivity of the nonthermal channel and its insensitivity to subsurface modes makes this technique an ideal tool for the study of surface-located vibrations.Entities:
Year: 2017 PMID: 29341710 DOI: 10.1103/PhysRevLett.119.136101
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Phys Rev Lett ISSN: 0031-9007 Impact factor: 9.161