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  • 1
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    College Park, Md. : American Institute of Physics (AIP)
    The Journal of Chemical Physics 100 (1994), S. 2277-2288 
    ISSN: 1089-7690
    Source: AIP Digital Archive
    Topics: Physics , Chemistry and Pharmacology
    Notes: We have simulated via molecular dynamics the interaction of F2 with the clean Si(100)-2×1 reconstructed surface. Using a Stillinger–Weber-type many-body potential with the Si–F interactions refit to ab initio data, we find that both vibrational and translational excitation of the incident F2 can lead to increased reactivity, but they do so in different ways. The dominant reaction channels are (a) F-atom abstraction, leading to the formation of one Si–F bond while the remaining fluorine atom is ejected away from the surface, and (b) dissociative chemisorption, where both fluorine atoms in the incident F2 molecule form Si–F bonds on the surface. Nonreactive scattering is almost never observed. As a result, enhanced reactivity is mainly characterized by an increase in dissociative chemisorption at the expense of F-atom abstraction and by a corresponding increase in the initial reaction probability S0. We find S0 ranges from 0.57±0.04 for the lowest excitation energies to 0.78±0.04 for the largest translational excitation of 20.9 kcal/mol. For cases where F-atom abstraction occurs, the exit velocities of fluorine atoms ejected from the surface are found to be independent of the incident F2 energy and with kinetic temperatures much higher than the surface temperature, suggesting that the exiting fluorine atom does not equilibrate with the surface, yet loses memory of its initial state. Finally, for dissociative chemisorption trajectories, we find that the adsite location of the two fluorine atoms is strongly dependent on the incident orientation.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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