H. Öström,H. Öberg,Hongliang Xin,Jerry LaRue,Martin Beye,Martina Dell’Angela,Jörgen Gladh,May Ling Ng,Jonas A. Sellberg,Sarp Kaya,Giuseppe Mercurio,Dennis Nordlund,Markus Hantschmann,F. Hieke,Danilo Kühn,W. F. Schlotter,Georgi L. Dakovski,Joshua J. Turner,Michael P. Minitti,A. Mitra
出处
期刊:Science [American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS)] 日期:2015-02-13卷期号:347 (6225): 978-982被引量:223
Femtosecond x-ray laser pulses are used to probe the carbon monoxide (CO) oxidation reaction on ruthenium (Ru) initiated by an optical laser pulse. On a time scale of a few hundred femtoseconds, the optical laser pulse excites motions of CO and oxygen (O) on the surface, allowing the reactants to collide, and, with a transient close to a picosecond (ps), new electronic states appear in the O K-edge x-ray absorption spectrum. Density functional theory calculations indicate that these result from changes in the adsorption site and bond formation between CO and O with a distribution of OC-O bond lengths close to the transition state (TS). After 1 ps, 10% of the CO populate the TS region, which is consistent with predictions based on a quantum oscillator model.