Publication
The Journal of Chemical Physics
Paper

Kinetics of atomic hydrogen+adsorbed Br reactions on Si(100) and Si(111) surfaces

View publication

Abstract

The kinetics of adsorbed Br removal on Si(100) and Si(111) using atomic hydrogen are presented for surface temperatures from 50-560 °C. Both the surface H and Br coverages are measured in real time as the reaction proceeds using time-of-flight scattering and recoiling spectroscopy (TOF-SARS). For both surfaces below TS=400 °C, the Br removal rate has a first-order dependence on Br coverage (θBr) and first-order dependence on atomic hydrogen flux (FH). On Si(111), the Br removal rate also has a first-order dependence on the surface hydrogen coverage (θH). The data for TS > 400 °C are explained by a thermal HBr desorption process, with a measured activation energy of 45 kcal/mol on Si( 100) and 43 kcal/mol on Si(111). At low TS (< 400 °C), Br is removed via an apparently activationless mechanism with activation energies of 0.7 kcal/mol on Si(100) and 1.4 kcal/mol on Si(111). Although the experimental observations on Si(100) are consistent with an Eley-Rideal (ER) reaction mechanism, other mechanisms should be considered. We suggest that Hat may be partially accommodated at the surface in a mobile precursor state before reaction with adsorbed Br. During accommodation of Hat, chemical potential energy is delivered to the surface and may "chemically activate" a local area causing HBr desorption to occur. The degree of "chemical activation" will depend on the rate and degree of H at accommodation, with the maximum delivered in direct Si-H bond formation. © 1993 American Institute of Physics.

Date

Publication

The Journal of Chemical Physics

Authors

Share