ANGULAR-RESOLVED DESORPTION OF POTASSIUM-IONS FROM BASAL GRAPHITE SURFACES - IONIZATION OF RYDBERG SPECIES FROM ADSORBED AND MOLECULAR-BEAMSUPPLIED ATOMS
Mb. Andersson et al., ANGULAR-RESOLVED DESORPTION OF POTASSIUM-IONS FROM BASAL GRAPHITE SURFACES - IONIZATION OF RYDBERG SPECIES FROM ADSORBED AND MOLECULAR-BEAMSUPPLIED ATOMS, Journal of the Chemical Society. Faraday transactions, 92(22), 1996, pp. 4581-4588
Citations number
40
Categorie Soggetti
Chemistry Physical","Physics, Atomic, Molecular & Chemical
The thermal desorption of Kf ions from a sample of well ordered pyroly
tic graphite is studied at temperatures from 1000 to 1500 K, measuring
, primarily, angular distributions due to a thermal K atom beam as wel
l as those due to K atoms previously absorbed in the graphite on expos
ure to the beam. The two sources of desorbing Kf give completely diffe
rent angular distributions. The K atoms emanating from the bulk mainly
penetrate out to the prism surfaces and leave the sample, as ions, fr
om the edges. This process involves a localized state of K, proposed t
o be a covalent Rydberg state with antibonding character. The atoms fr
om the K atom beam instead enter a mobile state on the basal surface.
Rapid diffusion into the bulk is observed above 1100 K, and the desorb
ing fraction is observed in a lobe centred around the normal of the ba
sal surface. A large fraction of the flux from the basal surface seems
to be in Rydberg states. This gives rise to charge-exchange processes
outside the sample, observed as less than complete acceleration of th
e ions and a narrowing of the lobe with increased external held streng
th. Several features give evidence for the formation and ionization of
Rydberg atoms: the non-equilibrium ionization of the K atoms from the
bulk at the sample edges, and the very large energy spread, > 5 eV, o
f the ions formed from the beam atoms being the most obvious. The new
results complement previous extensive studies of the surface kinetics
of alkali-metal atoms on graphite, and also agree with previous studie
s of formation of Rydberg atoms of K on non-metallic surfaces.