The Dynamics of Gas-Surface Energy Transfer in Collisions of Diatomic Gases with Organic Surfaces
Understanding interfacial interactions at the molecular level is important for interpreting and predicting the dynamics and mechanisms of all chemistry processes. A thorough understanding of the interaction dynamics and energy transfer between gas molecules and surfaces is essential for the study of...
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ndltd-VTETD-oai-vtechworks.lib.vt.edu-10919-511792020-09-29T05:44:01Z The Dynamics of Gas-Surface Energy Transfer in Collisions of Diatomic Gases with Organic Surfaces Wang, Guanyu Chemistry Morris, John R. Esker, Alan R. Tissue, Brian M. Self-assembled monolayers Molecular beam Ultra-high vacuum Energy transfer Solubility Understanding interfacial interactions at the molecular level is important for interpreting and predicting the dynamics and mechanisms of all chemistry processes. A thorough understanding of the interaction dynamics and energy transfer between gas molecules and surfaces is essential for the study of various chemical reactions. The collisions of diatomic molecules on organic surfaces are crucial to the study of atmospheric chemistry. Molecular beam scattering experiments performed in ultra-high vacuum chambers provide insight into the dynamics of gas-surface interactions. Many questions remain to be answered in the study of gas-surface interfacial chemistry. For example, what affects the energy transfer between gas molecules and surfaces? How do intermolecular forces affect the interfacial interaction dynamics? We have approached these questions by scattering diatomic gas molecules from functionalized self-assembled monolayers (SAMs). Our results indicate that the intermolecular forces between gas molecules and surfaces play an important role in the energy transfer processes. Moreover, the stronger the intermolecular forces, the more often the incident molecules come into thermal equilibrium with the surface. Furthermore, most of the previous approaches toward understanding gas-surface interaction dynamics considered the interactions as independent incidents. By scattering O2, N2, CO and NO on both CH3- and OH- terminated SAM, we found a correlation between the gas-surface interactions and a bulk property, solubility. Both being strongly affected by intermolecular forces, the gas-surface energy transfer and solubility of gases in surface-similar solvents (water for OH-SAM, n-hexane for CH3-SAM) have a positive correlation. This correlation facilitates the understanding of interfacial dynamics at the molecular level, and helps predict the outcome of the similar-size gas collisions on surfaces. Master of Science 2015-01-10T09:00:33Z 2015-01-10T09:00:33Z 2015-01-09 Thesis vt_gsexam:4192 http://hdl.handle.net/10919/51179 In Copyright http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/ ETD application/pdf Virginia Tech |
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Self-assembled monolayers Molecular beam Ultra-high vacuum Energy transfer Solubility |
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Self-assembled monolayers Molecular beam Ultra-high vacuum Energy transfer Solubility Wang, Guanyu The Dynamics of Gas-Surface Energy Transfer in Collisions of Diatomic Gases with Organic Surfaces |
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Understanding interfacial interactions at the molecular level is important for interpreting and predicting the dynamics and mechanisms of all chemistry processes. A thorough understanding of the interaction dynamics and energy transfer between gas molecules and surfaces is essential for the study of various chemical reactions. The collisions of diatomic molecules on organic surfaces are crucial to the study of atmospheric chemistry. Molecular beam scattering experiments performed in ultra-high vacuum chambers provide insight into the dynamics of gas-surface interactions.
Many questions remain to be answered in the study of gas-surface interfacial chemistry. For example, what affects the energy transfer between gas molecules and surfaces? How do intermolecular forces affect the interfacial interaction dynamics? We have approached these questions by scattering diatomic gas molecules from functionalized self-assembled monolayers (SAMs). Our results indicate that the intermolecular forces between gas molecules and surfaces play an important role in the energy transfer processes. Moreover, the stronger the intermolecular forces, the more often the incident molecules come into thermal equilibrium with the surface. Furthermore, most of the previous approaches toward understanding gas-surface interaction dynamics considered the interactions as independent incidents. By scattering O2, N2, CO and NO on both CH3- and OH- terminated SAM, we found a correlation between the gas-surface interactions and a bulk property, solubility. Both being strongly affected by intermolecular forces, the gas-surface energy transfer and solubility of gases in surface-similar solvents (water for OH-SAM, n-hexane for CH3-SAM) have a positive correlation. This correlation facilitates the understanding of interfacial dynamics at the molecular level, and helps predict the outcome of the similar-size gas collisions on surfaces. === Master of Science |
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Chemistry |
author_facet |
Chemistry Wang, Guanyu |
author |
Wang, Guanyu |
author_sort |
Wang, Guanyu |
title |
The Dynamics of Gas-Surface Energy Transfer in Collisions of Diatomic Gases with Organic Surfaces |
title_short |
The Dynamics of Gas-Surface Energy Transfer in Collisions of Diatomic Gases with Organic Surfaces |
title_full |
The Dynamics of Gas-Surface Energy Transfer in Collisions of Diatomic Gases with Organic Surfaces |
title_fullStr |
The Dynamics of Gas-Surface Energy Transfer in Collisions of Diatomic Gases with Organic Surfaces |
title_full_unstemmed |
The Dynamics of Gas-Surface Energy Transfer in Collisions of Diatomic Gases with Organic Surfaces |
title_sort |
dynamics of gas-surface energy transfer in collisions of diatomic gases with organic surfaces |
publisher |
Virginia Tech |
publishDate |
2015 |
url |
http://hdl.handle.net/10919/51179 |
work_keys_str_mv |
AT wangguanyu thedynamicsofgassurfaceenergytransferincollisionsofdiatomicgaseswithorganicsurfaces AT wangguanyu dynamicsofgassurfaceenergytransferincollisionsofdiatomicgaseswithorganicsurfaces |
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1719345738874355712 |