Related Content
Search Google Scholar for:
More Information
Related Jobs from ScienceCareers
|
|
Science 6 October 2000: Vol. 290. no. 5489, pp. 111 - 114 DOI: 10.1126/science.290.5489.111
|
|
Reports
Vibrational Promotion of Electron Transfer
Yuhui Huang,1
Charles T. Rettner,2
Daniel J. Auerbach,2
Alec M. Wodtke1
By using laser methods to prepare specific quantum
states of gas-phase nitric oxide molecules, we examined the role of
vibrational motion in electron transfer to a molecule from a metal
surface free from the complicating influence of solvation effects. The signature of the electron transfer process is a highly efficient multiquantum vibrational relaxation event, where the nitrogen oxide
loses hundreds of kilojoules per mole of energy on a subpicosecond time
scale. These results cannot be explained simply on the basis of
Franck-Condon factors. The large-amplitude vibrational motion associated with molecules in high vibrational states strongly modulates
the energetic driving force of the electron transfer reaction. These
results show the importance of molecular vibration in promoting
electron transfer reactions, a class of chemistry important to
molecular electronics devices, solar energy conversion, and many
biological processes.
1 Department of Chemistry, University of
California, Santa Barbara, CA 93106, USA.
2 IBM
Research Division, Almaden Research Center, San Jose, CA 95120-6099,
USA.
Read the Full Text
THIS ARTICLE HAS BEEN CITED BY OTHER ARTICLES:
- Capturing the Complexities of Molecule-Surface Interactions.
- E. Hasselbrink (2009)
Science
326, 809-810
| Abstract »
| Full Text »
| PDF »
- Dynamical Steering and Electronic Excitation in NO Scattering from a Gold Surface.
- N. Shenvi, S. Roy, and J. C. Tully (2009)
Science
326, 829-832
| Abstract »
| Full Text »
| PDF »
- Inverse Velocity Dependence of Vibrationally Promoted Electron Emission from a Metal Surface.
- N. H. Nahler, J. D. White, J. LaRue, D. J. Auerbach, and A. M. Wodtke (2008)
Science
321, 1191-1194
| Abstract »
| Full Text »
| PDF »
- Reactive and Nonreactive Scattering of H2 from a Metal Surface Is Electronically Adiabatic.
- P. Nieto, E. Pijper, D. Barredo, G. Laurent, R. A. Olsen, E.-J. Baerends, G.-J. Kroes, and D. Farias (2006)
Science
312, 86-89
| Abstract »
| Full Text »
| PDF »
|
|