Probing the mechanism of infrared resonant desorption of hydrogen from Si(111): anharmonicity and energy pooling

ORAL

Abstract

Desorption of hydrogen from a Si(111) surface by resonant infrared excitation of the Si--H vibrational stretch mode requires vibrational ladder climbing of a Si--H bond to a high level leading to associative desorption. We report recent experiments probing the mechanism of ladder climbing. H$_2$ desorption is observed when the excitation linewidths are narrower than the anharmonicity of the Si--H bond, favoring energy pooling over multiphoton absorption. The resonance width of H$_2$ desorption with an excitation linewidth of 8.7~cm$^{-1}$ is measured to be 39~cm$^{-1}$, opening a new opportunity for site--selective modification on the Si(111) surface. The desorption yield decreases when the sample temperature increases, consistent with an energy pooling process.

*This work is funded by DARPA/SPAWAR grant N66001-04-1-8924, DOE grant ER45781, and NSF grant DMR-0306239.

Authors

  • Zhiheng Liu

    • Vanderbilt University
  • Leonard Feldman

    • Vanderbilt University
  • Norman Tolk

    • Vanderbilt University
  • Zhenyu Zhang

    • Oak Ridge National Laboratory \& University of Tennessee
    • Materials Science and Technology Division, Oak Ridge National Laboratory
    • Oak Ridge National Laboratory, The University of Tennessee
    • Oak Ridge National Laboratory
    • Materials Science and Technology Division, Oak Ridge National Laboratory, Oak Ridge, TN 37831
    • ORNL
  • Philip Cohen

    • University of Minnesota