Abstract

The aim of this work was to answer the question whether in the process of gadolinium hydride formation the negatively charged hydrogen adspecies arise directly on the surface at some coverage, or a transition from protonic to anionic hydrogen occurs in the bulk. Thin gadolinium films were deposited on glass under UHV conditions and transformed “in situ” into GdH x (0.01 < x < 3) by introducing H 2 in successive calibrated doses. Work function changes Δ Φ and pressure P were recorded continuously. Knowing the weight of the thin Gd film and the amount of hydrogen consumed, the atomic ratio H/Gd could be determined and correlated with Δ Φ and P at every step of the process. Parallel experiments were performed measuring the resistance and optical transparency of thin gadolinium films deposited under identical conditions during their transition into GdH x (0.01 < x < 3). It was found that in the process of GdH x formation, light-reflecting metallic thin Gd film is transferred into transparent trihydride while its resistance increases by several orders of magnitude. At low coverage, positively polarized hydrogen adspecies arise, penetrating quickly into the bulk. When the average H/Gd concentration approaches 1, negatively charged hydrogen adspecies appear directly on the surface, slowly penetrating into the bulk.

Full Text
Paper version not known

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call