The initial growth of water molecules to form the first bilayer and then ic
e layers on Ru(001) was studied utilizing work function change (Delta Phi),
temperature programmed desorption (TPD), and supersonic atomic beam-collis
ion-induced desorption (CID) measurements. A kinetic model that reproduces
the first bilayer growth, as determined by the Delta Phi measurements, was
developed. It indicates that monomers dominate the cluster size distributio
n at low coverages, but at high coverages, tetramers gradually become the d
ominant clusters. Small contributions to Delta Phi suggest that tetramers a
re cyclic at the adsorbed state with inclined dipoles. CID measurements of
H2O and D2O at coverages near one bilayer reveal strong selectivity to the
removal of molecules in the A(2) adsorption sites over those in the icelike
C sites and the A(1) sites. Soft removal rates of thicker ice layers as a
result of CID with energetic Kripton atoms were then studied as a function
of the ice layer thickness. Near the completion of the third bilayer, a sha
rp stabilization of the ice structure occurs, which leads to two concomitan
t effects: (a) a significant decrease in the CID removal rate of the ice la
yers, and (b) caging of adsorbed nitrogen followed by an extremely sharp de
sorption of the trapped molecules near 165 K. This happens at the onset of
the ice desorption temperature. These effects are discussed in terms of the
structure of the first layers of ice which grow on the surface of a Ru(001
) single crystal and are consistent with recent model molecular dynamics si
mulations of such a system.