Simultaneous tracking of ultrafast surface and gas-phase dynamics in solid-gas interfacial reactions

09 May 2024, Version 1
This content is a preprint and has not undergone peer review at the time of posting.

Abstract

Real-time detection of intermediate species and final products at the surface and near-surface in interfacial solid-gas reactions is critical for an accurate understanding of heterogeneous reaction mechanisms. In this contribution, an experimental method that can simultaneously monitor the ultrafast dynamics at the surface and above the surface in photoinduced heterogeneous reactions is presented. The method relies on a combination of mass spectrometry and femtosecond pump-probe spectroscopy. As a model system, the photoinduced reaction of methyl iodide on and above a cerium oxide surface is investigated. The species that are simultaneously detected from the surface and gas-phase present distinct features in the mass spectra, such as a sharp peak followed by an adjacent broad shoulder. The sharp peak is attributed to the species detected from the surface while the broad shoulder is due to the detection of gas-phase species above the surface, as confirmed by multiple experiments. By monitoring the evolution of the sharp peak and broad shoulder as a function of the pump-probe time delay, transient signals are obtained that describe the ultrafast photoinduced reaction dynamics of methyl iodide on the surface and in gas-phase. Finally, SimION simulations are performed to confirm the origin of the ions produced on the surface and gas-phase.

Keywords

Pump probe spectroscopy
Photoinduced reactions
Ultrafast molecular dynamics
Solid gas interfaces

Supplementary materials

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Description
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Title
Supplementary Materials: Simultaneous tracking of ultrafast surface and gas-phase dynamics in solid-gas interfacial reactions
Description
Details of the experimental setup, sample preparation and characterization, SimION simulation, as well as additional mass spectra and pump-probe transient signals are provided in the Supplementary Materials.
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