Abstract

We report on the experimental evidence of the role of rotational alignment of the gas-phase molecules in the interaction of propylene with Ag(001). Molecular alignment has been controlled by a velocity selection of the impinging molecules, flying in a supersonic seeded molecular beam. The experimental findings indicate that at low surface coverage the sticking probability is independent of molecular alignment, while when coverage exceeds few percent of a monolayer, molecules impinging rotating parallel to the surface (helicopter-like configuration) achieve a higher chance to be trapped than those which impinge rotating perpendicularly (cartwheels). The sudden appearance of a large stereodynamic effect suggests that the adsorption proceeds via a mobile precursor state and is tentatively correlated with a change in the configuration of the added propylene molecules, which adsorb tilted rather than flat at the surface.

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