Abstract

Nearly monoenergetic beams of hydrogen and deuterium were used to determine dissociative sticking probabilities for H/sub 2/ and D/sub 2/ on Ni(100) at various energies. Variation of the surface temperature between 90 and 300 K had no effect on the dissociative sticking probability of H/sub 2/ at 3.6 and 5.8 kJ/mol incident beam energy, indicating a direct mechanism of dissociation. A four fold increase in the initial dissociative sticking probability for H/sub 2/ from 0.2 to 0.8 was observed by increasing the translational kinetic energy from 0.7 to 7.0 kJ/mol. The initial dissociative sticking probability for D/sub 2/ was slightly lower, increasing from 0.15 to 0.75 with increasing translational kinetic energy from 1.3 to 10.5 kJ/mol. The form of the increase with kinetic energy was explained by tunnelling through a low activation barrier, accounting as well for the high dissociation probability at low kinetic energies. The dissociative sticking probability decreased with hydrogen or deuterium adatom coverage at all energies. The decline in sticking probability with hydrogen coverage was fit to a s(theta) = s/sub 0/(1 - a theta)/sup n/ functional form. From this relationship it was deduced that hydrogen adatoms block only single sites and that four vacant sites aremore » needed for dissociation. The dissociative sticking probability for H/sub 2/ declined precipitously from 0.77 to 0.16 with oxygen adatom coverage from 0 to 5% of a monolayer at a translational energy of 9.6 kJ.mol. 36 references, 8 figures.« less

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