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The Design, Construction and Use of a Low-Temperature, Ultra High Vacuum Scanning Tunneling Microscope for Reaction Studies

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posted on 2017-11-28, 00:00 authored by Ashley R. Gans-Forrest

Scanning tunneling microscopy studies preformed at room temperature have provided insight as to how local structure of monolayers and gas-radicals react with one another. Previous experiments with hydrogen atoms show that surface morphology plays a large roll in how the reaction proceeds. We examined the reaction with chlorine–gas radicals and observed that, while surface morphology plays a role, the reaction mechanism differs in that the closed-packed regions of the monolayer are most reactive. However, thermal impacts on the surface do not allow for the direct observation of reactions as they proceed. To remedy this, a low-temperature, ultrahigh vacuum scanning probe instrument designed to preform the same reaction studies has been built utilizing 3D-printed components. Prior to 3D-printed metals being used in the LT-UHV instrument, they were used in a ambient-condition design that was vibrationally stable without the use of external isolation or dampening, and the 3D-printed metals were determined to be compatible with UHV.


History

Date Created

2017-11-28

Date Modified

2018-10-04

Defense Date

2017-07-27

Research Director(s)

S. Alex Kandel

Degree

  • Doctor of Philosophy

Degree Level

  • Doctoral Dissertation

Program Name

  • Chemistry and Biochemistry

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