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Inverse Velocity Dependence of Vibrationally...
Journal article

Inverse Velocity Dependence of Vibrationally Promoted Electron Emission from a Metal Surface

Abstract

All previous experimental and theoretical studies of molecular interactions at metal surfaces show that electronically nonadiabatic influences increase with molecular velocity. We report the observation of a nonadiabatic electronic effect that follows the opposite trend: The probability of electron emission from a low-work function surface--Au(111) capped by half a monolayer of Cs--increases as the velocity of the incident NO molecule decreases during collisions with highly vibrationally excited NO(X(2)pi((1/2)), V = 18; V is the vibrational quantum number of NO), reaching 0.1 at the lowest velocity studied. We show that these results are consistent with a vibrational autodetachment mechanism, whereby electron emission is possible only beyond a certain critical distance from the surface. This outcome implies that important energy-dissipation pathways involving nonadiabatic electronic excitations and, furthermore, not captured by present theoretical methods may influence reaction rates at surfaces.

Authors

Nahler NH; White JD; LaRue J; Auerbach DJ; Wodtke AM

Journal

Science, Vol. 321, No. 5893, pp. 1191–1194

Publisher

American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS)

Publication Date

August 29, 2008

DOI

10.1126/science.1160040

ISSN

0036-8075

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