Jefferson Lab
Information Resources
Jefferson Lab Home Search Contact JLab

    Vibrational dynamics of fullerene molecules adsorbed on metal surfaces studied with synchrotron infrared radiation

    Infrared (IR) spectroscopy of chemisorbed C60 on Ag (111), Au (110) and Cu (100) reveals that a non-IR-active mode becomes active upon adsorption, and that its frequency shifts proportionally with the charge transferred from the metal to the molecule by about 5 cm-1 per electron. The temperature dependence of the frequency and the width of this IR feature have also been followed for C60>/Cu (100) and were found to agree well with a weak anharmonic coupling (dephasing) to a low-frequency mode, which we suggest to be the frustrated translational mode of the adsorbed molecules.

    Additionally, the adsorption is accompanied by a broadband reflectance change, which is interpreted as due to the scattering of conduction electrons of the metal surface by the adsorbate. The reflectance change allows determination of the friction coefficient of the C60 molecules, which results in rather small values (~2 x 109s-1 for Ag and Au, and ~1.6 x 109s-1 for Cu), consistent with a marked metallic character of the adsorbed molecules.

    Pre-dosing of alkali atoms onto the metal substrates drastically changes the IR spectra recorded during subsequent C60 deposition: anti-absorption bands, as well as an increase of the broadband reflectance, occur and are interpreted as due to strong electron-phonon coupling with induced surface states.

    Appl. Phys. A 75, 147-153 (2002) (published online April 2002)

    Authors: P. Rudolf, R. Raval, P. Dumas, Gwyn P. Williams



    maintained by the Publications Manager