Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
1194901 International Journal of Mass Spectrometry 2008 13 Pages PDF
Abstract

Scattering of simple hydrocarbon ions CD3+, CD4+, and CD5+ from room-temperature carbon (HOPG) surfaces was investigated at low incident energies of 3–10 eV. Mass spectra, angular and translational energy distributions of the product ions were determined. From these data, information on processes at surfaces, absolute ion survival probabilities, scattering diagrams, and effective mass of the surface involved in the collisions was determined. Incident ions CD3+ and CD5+ showed inelastic non-dissociative (CD3+) or non-dissociative and dissociative (CD5+) scattering, the radical cation CD4+ exhibited both inelastic, dissociative, and reactive scattering, namely occurrence of H-atom transfer and C-chain build-up in reactions with hydrocarbons present on the room-temperature carbon surface. The absolute survival probability, at 10 eV and the incident angle of 30° (with respect to the surface), was about 12% for CD5+, and 0.3–0.4% for CD3+ and CD4+. It decreased towards zero at lower incident energies. Estimation of the effective surface mass involved in the collisional process led to m(S)eff of about 29 a.m.u. for CD3+ collisions, to 15–21 a.m.u. for inelastic and fragmenting collisions of CD4+, and 62 a.m.u. for CD5+ collisions, corresponding roughly to the mass of one or several CH3– (or C2H5–) terminal units of surface hydrocarbons. For the surface reaction of H-atom transfer in CD4+ collisions, the effective mass m(S)eff was about 48 a.m.u. suggesting a more complicated surface process than a simple direct H-atom pick-up reaction.

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Physical Sciences and Engineering Chemistry Analytical Chemistry
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