In Situ Monitoring of Chemical Reactions at a Solid–Water
Interface by Femtosecond Acoustics
Posted on 2017-10-23 - 00:00
Chemical
reactions at a solid–liquid interface are of fundamental
importance. Interfacial chemical reactions occur not only at the very
interface but also in the subsurface area, while existing monitoring
techniques either provide limited spatial resolution or are applicable
only for the outmost atomic layer. Here, with the aid of the time-domain
analysis with femtosecond acoustics, we demonstrate a subatomic-level-resolution
technique to longitudinally monitor chemical reactions at solid–water
interfaces, capable of in situ monitoring even the subsurface area
under atmospheric conditions. Our work was proven by monitoring the
already-known anode oxidation process occurring during photoelectrochemical
water splitting. Furthermore, whenever the oxide layer thickness equals
an integer number of the effective atomic layer thickness, the
measured acoustic echo will show higher signal-to-noise ratios with
reduced speckle noise, indicating the quantum-like behavior of this
coherent-phonon-based technique.
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Shen, Chih-Chiang; Weng, Meng-Yu; Sheu, Jinn-Kong; Yao, Yi-Ting; Sun, Chi-Kuang (2017). In Situ Monitoring of Chemical Reactions at a Solid–Water
Interface by Femtosecond Acoustics. ACS Publications. Collection. https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.jpclett.7b02384