P. Dumas et al., Friction of molecules at metallic surfaces: experimental approach using synchrotron infrared spectroscopy, SURF SCI, 435, 1999, pp. 797-805
Adsorbate dynamics has received increasing interest over the last years, as
it has been realized that the electron dynamics of the substrate can be pr
ofoundly affected by adsorbates due to couplings between vibrational and el
ectronic states. Persson has developed a model where the scattering of the
conduction electrons by the adsorbate results in a friction force between t
he adsorbate and the metallic substrate. The model predicts that the dipole
-forbidden low-frequency adsorbate modes exhibit anti-absorption peaks, and
that the broadband infrared (IR) reflectance change displays a characteris
tic frequency dependence in the anomalous skin-effect region, with an asymp
totic limit in the mid-IR. The friction coefficient, which can be extracted
from the asymptotic change of the reflectance, equals the inverse of the e
lectronic contribution to the lifetime of the frustrated parallel translati
on.
This model has been verified by recording simultaneously the direct-current
(DC) resistance change, the broadband IR reflectance change and the IR fea
tures for various adsorbates on Cu(111) thin films epitaxially grown on TiO
2(110) substrates. The friction coefficients obtained from the DC resistanc
e change and from the IR reflectance change show good agreement. Coadsorpti
on experiments reveal the marked dependence of the friction coefficient on
the adsorbate-induced density of states at the Fermi level (E-F).
Using the Newns-Anderson model for chemisorption, the IR reflectance change
of C-60 adsorbed on the following noble metal surfaces: Ag(111), Au(110) a
nd Cu(100), indicates a high density of induced states at E-F. (C) 1999 Els
evier Science B.V, All rights reserved.