Abstract

Dissipation of chemical energy released in exothermic reactions at metal surfaces may happen adiabatically by creation of phonons or non-adiabatically by excitation of the electronic system of the metal or the reactants. In the past decades, the only direct experimental evidence for such non-adiabatic reactions has been exoelectron emission into vacuum and surface chemiluminescence which are observed in a special class of very exothermic reactions. The creation of e–h pairs in the metal has been discussed in many theoretical models but it was only recently that a novel experimental approach using Schottky diodes with ultrathin metal films makes direct measurement of reaction-induced hot electrons and holes possible. The chemical reaction creates hot charge carriers which travel ballistically from the metal film surface toward the Schottky interface and are detected as a chemicurrent in the diode. By now, such currents have been observed during adsorption of atomic hydrogen and deuterium on Ag, Cu and Fe surfaces as well as chemisorption of atomic and molecular oxygen, of NO and NO 2 molecules and of certain hydrocarbons on Ag. This paper reviews briefly exoelectron and chemiluminescence experiments and the concept of the Nørskov–Newns–Lundqvist model. The major part is devoted to the detection of chemically induced e–h pairs with thin metal film Si Schottky diodes by discussing the different influences on the chemicurrent magnitude and presenting experimental results predominantly with hydrogen and deuterium atoms. The experiments introduce a new method to investigate surface reaction kinetics and dynamics by use of an electronic device. In addition, the diodes may be used as selective reactive gas sensors.

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