Abstract
Molecular
beam-surface scattering experiments have been used to study the effect of N atoms
on the reactivity of O atoms with a high-temperature carbon surface to produce
CO. The CO flux produced from
bombardment of a vitreous carbon surface by a beam containing N and O atoms was
compared with the CO flux produced from bombardment by beams containing either
N or O atoms. The presence of small mole
fractions of N atoms of 0.02-0.08 enhanced the reactivity of O atoms by a
factor of 1.4-1.6 in the range of surface temperatures from 1100 to 1700 K. A detailed explanation of the observed
results requires more study, but it appears that N atoms can act as a catalyst
to increase the reactivity of O with carbon and that a relatively low flux of N
atoms may be sufficient to saturate the catalytic effect. This catalytic effect seems to be fairly insensitive
to the surface temperature, at least over the temperature range used in this
study. This observation is important in
the development of finite-rate models of air-carbon ablation during hypersonic
flight.