Inelastic Electron Tunneling Spectroscopy

Inelastic Electron Tunneling Spectroscopy
Author: T. Wolfram
Publisher: Springer
Total Pages: 262
Release: 1978-04
Genre: Science
ISBN:

Inelastic Electron Tunneling Spectroscop~ or lETS, provides a unique technique for electronically monitoring the vibrational modes of molecul (;5 adsorbed on a metal oxide surface. Since the discovery of the phenomena by JAKLEVIC and LM1BE in 1966, lETS has been developed by a number of scientists as a method for studying the surface chemistry of molecular species adsorbed on aluminum oxide. Recent applications of lETS include investigations of physical and chemical adsorption of hydrocarbons, studies of catalysis by metal particles, detection and identification of trace substances in air and water, and studies of biological molecules and electron damage to such molecules. lETS has been employed to investigate adhesive materials, and studies are currently in prog ress to investigate corrosion species and corrosion inhibitors on aluminum and its alloys. Electronic transitions of molecules have also been studied by lETS. The recent development of the "external doping" technique, whereby molecu lar species can be introduced into fabricated tunnel junctions, opens the door for a vast new array of surface chemical studies by lETS. lETS is rap idly becoming an important tool for the study of surface and interface phe nomena. In addition to its role in surface studies, inelastic tunneling has proved extremely valuable for the study of the electronic properties of thin metallic films, and the recent discovery of light emission from inelastic tunneling promises to be of some importance in the area of device physics.

Vibrational Spectroscopy of Molecules on Surfaces

Vibrational Spectroscopy of Molecules on Surfaces
Author: Theodore E. Madey
Publisher: Springer Science & Business Media
Total Pages: 478
Release: 2013-11-11
Genre: Science
ISBN: 1468487590

The observation of the vibrational spectra of adsorbed species provides one of the most incisive methods for und erst an ding chemical and physical phenomena on surfaces. At the present time, many approaches may be applied to studies of molecular vibrations on surfaces. Some of these are used on high-area solids of technological importance (e.g., heterogeneous catalysts) while others are applied to single-crystal substrates to gain better understanding under conditions of controlled surface structure. This book has attempted to bring together in one place a discussion of the major methods used to measure vibrational spectra of surface species. The emphasis is on basic concepts and experimental methods rather than a current survey of the extensive literature in this field. Two introductory chapters describe the basic theoretical aspects of vibrational spectroscopy on surfaces, dealing with normal modes and excitation mechanisms in vibrational spectroscopy. The remaining seven chapters deal with various methods employed to observe surface vibra tions. These are arranged in an order that first treats the use of various methods on surfaces that are not of the single-crystal type. It is in this area that the field first got started in the late 1940s with pioneering work by Terenin and others in the Soviet Union, and by Eisehens and others in the United States in the 1950s. The last four chapters deal with relatively recent methods that permit vibrational studies to be made on single crystal substrates.

Vibrational Inelastic Electron Tunneling Spectroscopy of Surface Adsorbed Single Molecules at Sub-kelvin Temperature

Vibrational Inelastic Electron Tunneling Spectroscopy of Surface Adsorbed Single Molecules at Sub-kelvin Temperature
Author: Chi-Lun Jiang
Publisher:
Total Pages: 204
Release: 2015
Genre:
ISBN: 9781321995978

With a 600mk homebuilt UHV STM system, we studied molecular vibration at the solid surface with inelastic electron tunneling spectroscopy (IETS) of Acetylene single molecules adsorbed on Cu(100) surface and revealed five new vibrational modes that were previously inaccessible to STM-IETS at 8K temperature. The identification of vibrational IETS features with normalized conductance change (Î4Ï3/Ï3) as low as 0.24% was demonstrated. Facilitated by the high energy resolution, we also revealed the anisotropic vibrational energy of carbon0́3monoxide (CO) molecule induced by substrate surface symmetry. The discrepancy in vibrational energy as small as 0.8meV can be resolved by STM-IETS. Our results also showed that the change in vibrational behavior of CO can be used to understand its environment. CO can be vertically transferred from substrate surface to STM tip and creates a scanning probe which has the characteristic vibrational signal of CO contained in the inelastic component of the tunneling current; i.e. the inelastic tunneling probe (itProbe). The itProbe senses the local potential energy landscape by imaging the spatial variations of CO hindered-translational mode and resolves the skeletal structure and bonding details of a surface adsorbed Cobalt-Phthalocyanine molecule (CoPc). The image contrast of itProbe also reveals the interaction between one CoPc and the substrate surface as well as the interaction paths between neighboring CoPcs.