نتایج جستجو برای: hydrogen desorption

تعداد نتایج: 165961  

1999
Shouleh Nikzad Selmer S. Wong Channing C. Ahn Aimee L. Smith Harry A. Atwater Thomas J. Watson

In situ analysis of hydrocarbon desorption from hydrogen terminated Si( 100) surfaces was performed in a silicon molecular beam epitaxy system, using reflection electron energy loss spectroscopy, in conjunction with conventional reflection high energy electron diffraction analysis. Measurements of C K edge core loss intensities demonstrate that this method is sufficiently sensitive to enable in...

2000
Nisha Shukla Andrew J. Gellman

Temperature programed desorption has been used to study the desorption kinetics and desorption energies of a set of alcohols and fluorinated alcohols adsorbed on an a-CHx film. The alcohols serve as models for the hydroxyl end groups of Fomblin Zdol, the lubricant most commonly used with the amorphous carbon overcoats sputtered onto the surfaces of magnetic data storage disks. Temperature progr...

2005
Yuichiro Miura Saori Yokota Yuh Fukai Tohru Watanabe

Effects of hydrogen on the structure of electrodeposited Cr films have been investigated by combining X-ray diffraction and thermal desorption spectroscopy, systematically varying the plating conditions. A large amount of hydrogen was dissolved at high current densities in a Cr-rich bath at low temperatures, and caused structural changes from bcc to hcp and fcc hydrides with increasing hydrogen...

2005
Bun Tsuchiya Shinji Nagata Naofumi Ohtsu Kentaro Toh Tatsuo Shikama

Changes in hydrogen distribution in -phase titanium hydrides (TiH1:92 1:95), covered with titanium oxide layers (TiO and TiO2), were investigated by elastic recoil detection analysis (ERDA) after isochronal and isothermal annealing experiments. The hydrogen concentration near to the surface of the hydride exponentially decreased as a function of annealing time in the temperature range from 423 ...

Journal: :e-Journal of Surface Science and Nanotechnology 2008

2002
D. Wayne GOODMAN John T. YATES Theodore E. MADEY

The chemical nature of the surface species formed either by the interaction of H2 and CO on transition metal surfaces or by the decomposition of molecules composed of hydrogen and CO is vital to the understanding of many current catalytic problems [l-5 1. In a systematic attempt to identify a catalytic interaction between adsorbed-CO and adsorbed-H on a Ni( 100) surface, we have discovered the ...

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