Springer Fachmedien, Wiesbaden, 2016. – 118 p. – ISBN10: 3658135352
Publication in the field of natural sciences
Daniel Halwidl presents the development of an effusive molecular beam apparatus, which allows the dosing of gases, liquids, and solids in ultra-high vacuum. The apparatus is designed to adsorb precise and reproducible doses to a defined area on metal oxide samples, which is required in Temperature Programmed Desorption and other surface chemistry experiments. The design and the construction of the apparatus is described. The properties of the molecular beam are experimentally confirmed. The beam profile has a core diameter of 3.5 mm and a standard core pressure of 4 x 10-8 mbar, while the background pressure is 4 orders of magnitude lower.
TopicsPhysical Chemistry
Catalysis
Molecular Beams
Temperature Programmed Desorption
Flow of GasesFlow Regimes
Conductance
Molecular flow
Continuum flow
Transition flow and conductance over the whole pressure range
Effusive Molecular Beam SourcesThin-walled Orifice
Single Tube
Capillary Array
Molecular BeamRequirements
Concept
Theory
Construction
ResultsTest Setup
Molecular Beam Profile
Shutter
Summary and Outlook
AppendicesGas Properties
Conductance
Pirani Gauge Argon Correction Factor