New technique reveals how molecules bond at tiny scales, speeding up materials design
Researchers have solved a long-standing problem in measuring how chemical reactions unfold on material surfaces, opening faster paths to develop new semiconductors, catalysts, and nanotech products. The method cuts through ambiguity in existing measurements, letting companies predict reaction behavior with greater accuracy and fewer costly experiments.
Originaltitel: Mechanistic insights into on-surface reactions from isothermal temperature-programmed X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy
<p>On-surface synthesis often proceeds under kinetic control due to the irreversibility of key reaction steps, rendering kinetic studies pivotal. The accurate quantification of reaction rates also bears potential for unveiling reaction mechanisms. Temperature-Programmed X-ray Photoelectron Spectroscopy (TP-XPS) has emerged as an analytical tool for kinetic studies with splendid chemical and sufficient temporal resolution. Here, we demonstrate that the common linear temperature ramps lead to fitting ambiguities. Moreover, pinpointing the reaction order remains intricate, although this key parameter entails information on atomistic mechanisms. Yet, TP-XPS experiments with a stepped temperature profile comprised of isothermal segments facilitate the direct quantification of rate constants from fitting time courses. Thereby, rate constants are obtained for a series of temperatures, which allows independent extraction of both activation energies and pre-exponentials from Arrhenius plots. By using two analogous doubly versus triply brominated aromatic model compounds, we found that their debromination on Ag(111) is best modeled by second-order kinetics and thus proceeds via the involvement of a second, non-obvious reactant. Accordingly, we propose that debromination is activated by surface supplied Ag adatoms. This hypothesis is supported by Density Functional Theory (DFT) calculations. We foresee auspicious prospects for this TP-XPS variant for further exploring the kinetics and mechanisms of on-surface reactions. The temporal evolution of the reactant concentrations as measured by XPS for different temperature profiles reveals that the debromination of organic molecules on Ag(111) is activated by Ag adatoms.</p>