1 research outputs found
Energy Transfer and Thermal Accommodation in Ozone Scattering from a Perfluorinated Self-Assembled Monolayer
A modification of the energy transfer model recently
proposed by
two of us (ref )
is tested in this work by an extensive comparison with the simulation
results for O<sub>3</sub> scattering from a perfluorinated self-assembled
monolayer (F-SAM) as well as with previous NO + FSAM and Ar + F-SAM
scattering results. The model fits very well the trajectory data over
a ∼10<sup>3</sup>-fold of incident energies. The percentage
of energy transferred to the surface, predicted by the model at high
incident energies, decreases with the number of degrees of freedom
of the projectile because they compete with the surface degrees of
freedom as possible destinations of the incident energy. The distributions
of the scattered ozone molecules over translational and rotational
states show a low-energy component characterized by a Maxwell–Boltzmann
(MB) distribution at the surface temperature that survives at the
highest collision energies. The dependence of the fraction of the
MB component on the incident energy is an exponential decay function
and the rate of decay is similar for the rotational and translational
distributions. A non-negligible number of the O<sub>3</sub> + F-SAM
trajectories that penetrate the surface at high energies have very
long residence times (longer than the simulation time), which enables
thermal accommodation of the rotational and translational degrees
of freedom. A new method to categorize the O<sub>3</sub> + F-SAM trajectories,
based on the residence time, shows that, at very low incident energies
(<10 kcal/mol), thermal accommodation can be achieved in a single
collision event