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Interaction of hydrogen and oxygen with bulk defects and surfaces of metals

Abstract

The thesis deals with the interaction of hydrogen with defects in metals and the interaction of hydrogen and oxygen with metal surfaces studied by ion-beam techniques and scanning tunneling microscopy (STM), respectively. The first part of the thesis discusses the interaction of hydrogen with simple defects in transition metals. The trap-binding enthalpies and the lattice location of hydrogen trapped to vacancies have been determined, and an extremely simple and versatile picture of the hydrogen-metal interaction has evolved, in which the trap strength is mainly determined by the local electron density. Any dilution of the lattice will lead to a trap, vacancies and voids being the strongest trap. It is found that hydrogen trapped to vacancies in fcc metals is quantum-mechanically delocalized, and the excitation energies for the hydrogen in the vacancy potential are a few MeV only. The interaction of hydrogen with metal surfaces is studied by the transmission channeling (TC) technique. It is found that hydrogen chemisorbs in the highest-coordinated sites on the surfaces, and that there is a direct relationship between the hydrogen-metal bond length and the coordination number for the hydrogen. In the final part of the thesis the dynamics of the chemisorption process for oxygen and  More>>
Authors:
Publication Date:
May 01, 1994
Product Type:
Thesis/Dissertation
Report Number:
NEI-DK-1809
Reference Number:
SCA: 665300; 665100; PA: AIX-26:027854; EDB-95:048908; SN: 95001342126
Resource Relation:
Other Information: TH: Thesis (dr.scient.).; PBD: May 1994
Subject:
75 CONDENSED MATTER PHYSICS, SUPERCONDUCTIVITY AND SUPERFLUIDITY; COPPER; HYDROGEN EMBRITTLEMENT; SURFACES; HYDROGEN; VACANCIES; NICKEL; OXYGEN; CHEMISORPTION; DEUTERIUM; GRAIN BOUNDARIES; ION CHANNELING; ION IMPLANTATION; MICROSTRUCTURE; SCANNING ELECTRON MICROSCOPY; TRAPPING; 665300; 665100; INTERACTIONS BETWEEN BEAMS AND CONDENSED MATTER; NUCLEAR TECHNIQUES IN CONDENSED MATTER PHYSICS
OSTI ID:
10124490
Research Organizations:
Aarhus Univ. (Denmark). Inst. for Fysik og Astronomi; Aarhus Univ. (Denmark)
Country of Origin:
Denmark
Language:
English
Other Identifying Numbers:
Other: ON: DE95620638; TRN: DK9500012027854
Availability:
OSTI; NTIS; INIS
Submitting Site:
DKN
Size:
113 p.
Announcement Date:
Jul 04, 2005

Citation Formats

Besenbacher, F. Interaction of hydrogen and oxygen with bulk defects and surfaces of metals. Denmark: N. p., 1994. Web.
Besenbacher, F. Interaction of hydrogen and oxygen with bulk defects and surfaces of metals. Denmark.
Besenbacher, F. 1994. "Interaction of hydrogen and oxygen with bulk defects and surfaces of metals." Denmark.
@misc{etde_10124490,
title = {Interaction of hydrogen and oxygen with bulk defects and surfaces of metals}
author = {Besenbacher, F}
abstractNote = {The thesis deals with the interaction of hydrogen with defects in metals and the interaction of hydrogen and oxygen with metal surfaces studied by ion-beam techniques and scanning tunneling microscopy (STM), respectively. The first part of the thesis discusses the interaction of hydrogen with simple defects in transition metals. The trap-binding enthalpies and the lattice location of hydrogen trapped to vacancies have been determined, and an extremely simple and versatile picture of the hydrogen-metal interaction has evolved, in which the trap strength is mainly determined by the local electron density. Any dilution of the lattice will lead to a trap, vacancies and voids being the strongest trap. It is found that hydrogen trapped to vacancies in fcc metals is quantum-mechanically delocalized, and the excitation energies for the hydrogen in the vacancy potential are a few MeV only. The interaction of hydrogen with metal surfaces is studied by the transmission channeling (TC) technique. It is found that hydrogen chemisorbs in the highest-coordinated sites on the surfaces, and that there is a direct relationship between the hydrogen-metal bond length and the coordination number for the hydrogen. In the final part of the thesis the dynamics of the chemisorption process for oxygen and hydrogen on metal surfaces is studied by STM, a fascinating and powerful technique for exploring the atomic-scale realm of surfaces. It is found that there is a strong coupling between the chemisorption process and the distortion of the metal surface. The adsorbates induce a surface reconstruction, i.e. metal-metal bond breaks and metal-adsorbate bounds form. Whereas hydrogen interacts weakly with the metals and induces reconstructions where only nnn metals bonds are broken, oxygen interacts strongly with the metal, and the driving force for the O-induced reconstructions appears to be the formation of low-coordinated metal-O rows, formed by breaking of nn metal bonds.}
place = {Denmark}
year = {1994}
month = {May}
}