Abstract

We have investigated the mechanism of the chemical reaction of the benzene molecule adsorbed on Cu(110) surface induced by the injection of tunneling electrons using scanning tunneling microscopy (STM). With the dosing of tunneling electrons of the energy 2-5 eV from the STM tip to the molecule, we have detected the increase of the height of the benzene molecule by 40% in the STM image and the appearance of the vibration feature of the nu(C-H) mode in the inelastic tunneling spectroscopy (IETS) spectrum. It can be understood with a model in which the dissociation of C-H bonds occurs in a benzene molecule that induces a bonding geometry change from flat-lying to up-right configuration, which follows the story of the report of Lauhon and Ho on the STM-induced change of benzene on the Cu(100) surface. [L. J. Lauhon and W. Ho, J. Phys. Chem. A 104, 2463 (2000)]. The reaction probability shows a sharp rise at the sample bias voltage at 2.4 V, which saturates at 3.0 V, which is followed by another sharp rise at the voltage of 4.3 V. No increase of the reaction yield is observed for the negative sample voltage up to 5 eV. In the case of a fully deuterated benzene molecule, it shows the onset at the same energy of 2.4 eV, but the reaction probability is 10(3) smaller than the case of the normal benzene molecule. We propose a model in which the dehydrogenation of the benzene molecule is induced by the formation of the temporal negative ion due to the trapping of the electrons at the unoccupied resonant states formed by the pi orbitals. The existence of the resonant level close to the Fermi level ( approximately 2.4 eV) and multiple levels in less than approximately 5 eV from the Fermi level, indicates a fairly strong interaction of the Cu-pi(*) state of the benzene molecule. We estimated that the large isotope effect of approximately 10(3) can be accounted for with the Menzel-Gomer-Redhead (MGR) model with an assumption of a shallow potential curve for the excited state.

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