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Long-Time Non-Debye Kinetics of Molecular Desorption from Substrates with Frozen Disorder. | LitMetric

Long-Time Non-Debye Kinetics of Molecular Desorption from Substrates with Frozen Disorder.

Molecules

Department of Fundamental Sciences, Odessa Military Academy, 10 Fontanska Road, 65009 Odessa, Ukraine.

Published: August 2020

AI Article Synopsis

  • The study reveals that molecular desorption from disordered adsorbents behaves differently than predicted by traditional models at longer times.
  • It suggests that while hydrogen desorption from crystalline adsorbents may show second-order effects, this is only relevant at much longer times than when non-Debye behavior is observed.
  • A new approach is introduced, emphasizing the role of fluctuations in activation energy, which provides a better understanding of desorption kinetics in both crystalline and amorphous materials.

Article Abstract

The experiments on the kinetics of molecular desorption from structurally disordered adsorbents clearly demonstrate its non-Debye behavior at "long" times. In due time, when analyzing the desorption of hydrogen molecules from crystalline adsorbents, attempts were made to associate this behavior with the manifestation of second-order effects, when the rate of desorption is limited by the rate of surface diffusion of hydrogen atoms with their subsequent association into molecules. However, the estimates made in the present work show that the dominance of second-order effects should be expected in the region of times significantly exceeding those where the kinetics of H desorption have long acquired a non-Debye character. To explain the observed regularities, an approach has been developed according to which frozen fluctuations in the activation energy of desorption play a crucial role in the non-Debye kinetics of the process. The obtained closed expression for the desorption rate has a transparent physical meaning and allows us to give a quantitative interpretation of a number of experiments on the desorption kinetics of molecules not only from crystalline (containing frozen defects) but also from amorphous adsorbents. The ways of further development of the proposed theory and its experimental verification are outlined.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7464774PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/molecules25163662DOI Listing

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