Surface reactions of metal clusters I: The fast flow cluster reactor
- 1 November 1985
- journal article
- research article
- Published by AIP Publishing in Review of Scientific Instruments
- Vol. 56 (11) , 2123-2130
- https://doi.org/10.1063/1.1138381
Abstract
A new fast flow device for the study of metal cluster reactions in the gas phase is described and characterized. The new device utilizes metal clusters made by laser vaporization of an appropriate metal target mounted in the throat of a supersonic nozzle which exhausts into a fast-flow reaction tube. Reactants are injected into the flowing helium–metal cluster mixture at a point in the flow tube where shock waves have reheated the gas to roughly 320 K. Turbulence in the wake of these shock waves produces efficient mixing of the reactants. Measurement of the flow properties of this reaction tube indicate a residence time of 150–200 μs with an average density of helium buffer gas equivalent to 50–100 Torr at room temperature. Subsequent free expansion of this reaction mixture into a large vacuum chamber produces a supersonic beam with extensive cooling of the various constituents in the mixture (pyrazine was measured to be rotationally cooled to 10 K). The new cluster reaction device is, therefore, an excellent source for future studies of the jet-cooled metal cluster reaction products themselves.Keywords
This publication has 44 references indexed in Scilit:
- Free iron clusters react readily with oxygen and hydrogen sulfide, but are inert toward methaneThe Journal of Physical Chemistry, 1985
- Transition Metal MoleculesAnnual Review of Physical Chemistry, 1984
- Metal-deficient iron oxide clusters formed in the gas phaseThe Journal of Chemical Physics, 1984
- The photoreversible oxidative-addition, reductive-elimination reactions iron + molecular hydrogen .dblharw. iron hydride (FeH2) in low-temperature matrixesThe Journal of Physical Chemistry, 1984
- The copper hydride (CuH) + atomic hydrogen copper + molecular hydrogen matrix phase reactionThe Journal of Physical Chemistry, 1984
- Supersonic metal cluster beams of refractory metals: Spectral investigations of ultracold Mo2The Journal of Chemical Physics, 1983
- Resonance enhanced two-photon ionization studies in a supersonic molecular beam: Bromobenzene and iodobenzeneThe Journal of Chemical Physics, 1980
- Theoretical studies of nickel clusters and chemisorption of hydrogenJournal of Vacuum Science and Technology, 1979
- Measurement of chemiluminescent reaction cross sections for B+N2O→ BO*+N2 and Ho+N2O→HoO*+N2The Journal of Chemical Physics, 1976
- Laser-generated pulsed atomic beamsReview of Scientific Instruments, 1974