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Mass Transport in Surface Diffusion of van der Waals Bonded Systems: Boosted by Rotations?

J. Phys. Chem. Lett. 7 (2016) 4819-4824
Hedgeland H., Sacchi M., Singh P., McIntosh A.J., Jardine A.P., Alexandrowicz G., Ward D.J., Jenkins S.J., Allison W and Ellis J.

Abstract

Mass transport at a surface is a key factor in heterogeneous catalysis. The rate is determined by excitation across a translational barrier and depends on the energy landscape and the coupling to the thermal bath of the surface. Here we use helium spin-echo spectroscopy to track the microscopic motion of benzene adsorbed on Cu(001) at low coverage (θ ∼ 0.07 ML). Specifically, our combined experimental and computational data determine both the absolute rate and mechanism of the molecular motion. The observed rate is significantly higher by a factor of 3.0 ± 0.1 than is possible in a conventional, point-particle model and can be understood only by including additional molecular (rotational) coordinates. We argue that the effect can be described as an entropic contribution that enhances the population of molecules in the transition state. The process is generally relevant to molecular systems and illustrates the importance of the pre-exponential factor alongside the activation barrier in studies of surface kinetics.


The full text of this article may be found at: J. Phys. Chem. Lett. 7 (2016) 4819-4824

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