Molecular Beams and Nanoreactors
New methodology is being developed in our group to measure the
kinetics of catalytic reactions under well-defined conditions.
The main idea behind this work is to perform dynamic measurements on
single-crystal surfaces and under a control environment but mimicking
the high coverage and multi-component conditions typical of atmospheric
catalytic reactions. In the past kinetic parameters have been
determined for high probability reactions such as CO oxidation or NO
reduction by using an effusive molecular beam source in an arrangement
derivative from that originally developed by King and Wells but where
the emphasis is placed on measuring reaction rates at high gas fluxes
and surface coverages. Our initial setup was first tested for the
uptake of CO on Pt(111) as a function of CO beam flux, surface-to-doser
distance, and surface temperature [J. Liu, M. Xu, T. Nordmeyer and F.
Zaera, J. Phys. Chem. 99 (1995) 6167]. A homogeneous flux across
the surface was obtained by placing the ~10 mm-diameter sample
somewhere between 5 and 25 mm away from the beam source, an 12
mm-diameter capillary array. Only moderately low fluxes were
used, equivalent to local pressures at the surface on the order of 1E-6
to 1E-4 Torr, but the fact that the measured fraction of the beam
intercepted by the sample reproduces reasonably well estimates from
calculations at many doser-to-surface distances attests to the
collimated nature of the beam.

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Schematic representation of the effusive
molecular beam setup used for our dynamic kinetic
measurements. This design is based on that originally
developed by King and Wells, and consists of a collimated beam directed
towards the surface while the scattered molecules are detected as a
function of time by mass spectrometry. A flag is used to
intercept the beam at will in order to control the experimental
sequence.
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In order to be able to design instruments capable of
reproducing atmospheric-pressure environments, some effort has been
placed on trying to understand the factors that control the collimated
nature of the beam as its flux is increased. Our goal is to
direct high-flux beams to the front face of a single-crystal sitting in
a UHV environment in order to achieve molecular impinging frequencies
comparable to those encountered in typical catalytic systems. An
instrument was built to measure the beam flux and profile of the gas
beams emanating from capillary arrays by mounting that gas source on a
x-y-z stage in front of a skimmer connected to a differentially-pumped
detection chamber [J. M. Guevremont, S. Sheldon and F. Zaera, Rev. Sci.
Instr. 71 (2000) 3869]. Initial measurements with such an
apparatus have indicated that molecular flow, a requisite for
maintaining beam directionality, can be attained with backing pressures
of up to 30 Torr (see figure below). This leads to an impinging
frequency roughly equivalent to a pressure on the surface of about 30
mTorr, sufficient to perform steady-state experiments on most catalytic
systems.

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Conductance and peaking factor of beams
produced by an array of 10 µm
diameter capillaries as a function of backing pressure. The
conductance of this source remains constant in the molecular flow
regime until the drop seen at pressures between 5 and 10 Torr. It
does
increase again once it reaches a viscous flow regime, and the peaking
factor, a measure of collimation, also improves somewhat after reaching
a minimum about 50 Torr. Inset: Spatial distribution of the gas
beam
generated by the 10 µm-diameter capillary array, highlighting
again the
peaked nature of the resulting beam.
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Beam profile measurements were performed as well. An
example of the results obtained from those studies is shown in the
figure below. There, z represents the distance between the
surface and the beam, and x the relative transverse distance between
the centers of the beam and the skimmer. It is seen that even
though the absolute intensity of the center of the beam decays rapidly
as it is moved away from the skimmer, the width deteriorates at a much
slower rate. Also encouraging is the fact that similar profiles
have so far been obtained with backing pressures of up to 10 Torr,
which represent a total flux equivalent of about 10 mTorr on the
surface.

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Three-dimensional spatial profile of an
Ar molecular beam generated by using the capillary array described in
the text. Notice that even though the total flux decays rapidly
with distance, the spread does not deteriorate in any significant
way. This collimated nature of the beam is critical for the
design of high-flux catalytic experiments.
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An alternative approach also being pursued in our laboratory
is the use of a retractable nanoliter-sized reactor to be placed right
on the front surface of a single-crystal solid sample. This
instrumentation aims to address three kinetic issues not previously
resolved: (1) to allow for the measurement of low-probability reactions
such as most hydrocarbon conversions; (2) to identify the changes in
catalytic activity and selectivity induced by variations in pressure
over the whole range from UHV to atmospheric; and (3) to discriminate
between the reactivity of the crystalline surface of interest and that
of the associated polycrystalline edges and wires used to mount the
sample. In our design, the reactants are introduced via a small
micro-capillary and trapped within a volume of a few nanoliters
directly above the surface of the catalyst by an outer tube that also
serves as the conduit for gas pumping and sampling. The products
are then detected in a separate differentially-pumped chamber equipped
with a mass spectrometer. A picture of the prototypical
instrument we have already developed for this is provided below.

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Picture of the prototypical
nanoliter-sized reactor built in our laboratory for kinetic studies of
catalytic reactions. A single crystal is attached to the UHV
manipulator seen in the upper part of the picture via two electrical
feedthroughs, which are also used for cooling and heating of the
sample. The retractable probe that approaches the sample from the
bottom left consists of two concentric tubes, an inner capillary used
as the gas inlet, and an outer cone to define the volume of the
reactor. Gas flow and gas detection are achieved by differential
pumping of the trapped volume into a second chamber equipped with mass
spectrometry.
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The gas flow behavior of this system has been characterized as
a function of the separation of this nano-reactor from the sample, and
the gas detection during catalysis has been tested for the oxidation of
carbon monoxide on Pd(111). Preliminary data from the latter
measurements are shown below.

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Data from a preliminary kinetic run for
the oxidation of carbon monoxide on Pd(111) at 490 K using the
nanoliter-sized reactor described above. The uncalibrated mass
spectrometer signals for CO, O2 and CO2 are shown here as a function of
time as the gas mixture is introduced into the reactor. A CO:O2
1:2 mixture was used, and a final total flux of approximately 7E19
molec/cm^2 was attained, equivalent to a pressure of 200 mTorr on the
surface. The small size of signal for the CO2 production may be
explained by a combination of a lower mass spectrometer sensitivity
and/or a viscous flow pattern in the reactor.
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Researchers:
Funding:
Equipment:
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Dr. Dr. Egor Podgornov, Dr. Jarod Wilson
National Science Foundation
UHV Chambers #4 and #6 |
Last modified on July, 28, 2005
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