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A sputtering derived atomic oxygen source for studying fast atom reactionsA technique for the generation of fast atomic oxygen was developed. These atoms are created by ion beam sputtering from metal oxide surfaces. Mass resolved ion beams at energies up to 60 KeV are produced for this purpose using a 150 cm isotope separator. Studies have shown that particles sputtered with 40 KeV Ar(+) on Ta2O5 were dominantly neutral and exclusively atomic. The atomic oxygen also resided exclusively in its 3P ground state. The translational energy distribution for these atoms peaked at ca 7 eV (the metal-oxygen bond energy). Additional measurements on V2O5 yielded a bimodal distribution with the lower energy peak at ca 5 eV coinciding reasonably well with the metal-oxygen bond energy. The 7 eV source was used to investigate fast oxygen atom reactions with the 2-butene stereoisomers. Relative excitation functions for H-abstraction and pi-bond reaction were measured with trans-2-butene. The abstraction channel, although of minor relative importance at thermal energy, becomes comparable to the addition channel at 0.9 eV and dominates the high-energy regime. Structural effects on the specific channels were also found to be important at high energy.
Document ID
19870016754
Acquisition Source
Legacy CDMS
Document Type
Conference Paper
Authors
Ferrieri, Richard A.
(Brookhaven National Lab. Upton, NY, United States)
Yung, Y. Chu
(Brookhaven National Lab. Upton, NY, United States)
Wolf, Alfred P.
(Brookhaven National Lab. Upton, NY, United States)
Date Acquired
September 5, 2013
Publication Date
June 1, 1987
Publication Information
Publication: Jet Propulsion Lab., Proceedings of the NASA Workshop on Atomic Oxygen Effects
Subject Category
Inorganic And Physical Chemistry
Accession Number
87N26187
Funding Number(s)
CONTRACT_GRANT: DE-AC02-76CH-00016
Distribution Limits
Public
Copyright
Work of the US Gov. Public Use Permitted.
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