Electronic friction forces on molecules moving near metals
- 15 August 1997
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Physical Society (APS) in Physical Review B
- Vol. 56 (8) , 4938-4943
- https://doi.org/10.1103/physrevb.56.4938
Abstract
It is well known that molecules feel a long-ranged attractive force to metals which arises from the interaction of various molecular charges with their metal-induced “image charges.” Here we calculate (in this image charge model) the friction force coefficients for molecules moving near a metal. We consider the cases of ions, polar molecules, and spherical atoms.Keywords
This publication has 10 references indexed in Scilit:
- Electronic friction of physisorbed moleculesThe Journal of Chemical Physics, 1995
- Surface resistivity and vibrational damping in adsorbed layersChemical Physics Letters, 1991
- Nanotribology of a Kr monolayer: A quartz-crystal microbalance study of atomic-scale frictionPhysical Review Letters, 1991
- Slippage of simple liquid films adsorbed on silver and gold substratesJournal of Vacuum Science & Technology A, 1990
- Theory of energy dissipation in sliding crystal surfacesPhysical Review B, 1990
- Experimental observation of interfacial slippage at the boundary of molecularly thin films with gold substratesPhysical Review B, 1990
- Van Der Waals' FrictionEurophysics Letters, 1989
- Substrate-mediated dispersion interaction between adsorbed atoms and moleculesSurface Science, 1982
- Asymmetry of the Van der Waals interaction between a molecule and a surfaceSurface Science, 1982
- Penetration of the electric and magnetic velocity fields of a nonrelativistic point charge into a conducting planePhysical Review A, 1974