Theoretical studies of a hydrogen abstraction tool for nanotechnology
- 1 October 1991
- journal article
- Published by IOP Publishing in Nanotechnology
- Vol. 2 (4), 187-195
- https://doi.org/10.1088/0957-4484/2/4/004
Abstract
In the design of a nanoscale, site-specific hydrogen abstraction tool, the authors suggest the use of an alkynyl radical tip. Using ab initio quantum-chemistry techniques including electron correlation they model the abstraction of hydrogen from dihydrogen, methane, acetylene, benzene and isobutane by the acetylene radical. By conservative estimates, the abstraction barrier is small (less than 7.7 kcal mol-1) in all cases except for acetylene and zero in the case of isobutane. Thermal vibrations at room temperature should be sufficient to supply the small activation energy. Several methods of creating the radical in a controlled vacuum setting should be feasible. The authors show how nanofabrication processes can be accurately and inexpensively designed in a computational framework.Keywords
This publication has 27 references indexed in Scilit:
- Translational energy distribution from ethyne + h.nu.(193.3 nm) .fwdarw. ethynyl radical + hydrogen atomThe Journal of Physical Chemistry, 1991
- Molecular tip arrays for molecular imaging and nanofabricationJournal of Vacuum Science & Technology B: Microelectronics and Nanometer Structures, 1991
- Numerical modeling of the filament-assisted diamond growth environmentJournal of Applied Physics, 1990
- Bond strengths of ethylene and acetyleneJournal of the American Chemical Society, 1990
- Methyl radical and H-atom concentrations during diamond growthJournal of Applied Physics, 1990
- A new determination of the dissociation energy of acetyleneThe Journal of Chemical Physics, 1989
- Acetylene carbon-hydrogen bond dissociation energy using 193.3-nm photolysis and sub-Doppler resolution hydrogen-atom spectroscopy: 127 .+-. 1.5 kcal mol-1The Journal of Physical Chemistry, 1989
- Measurement of stable species present during filament-assisted diamond growthApplied Physics Letters, 1988
- Infrared detection of gaseous species during the filament-assisted growth of diamondApplied Physics Letters, 1988
- Photodissociation of acetylene at 193.3 nmThe Journal of Physical Chemistry, 1985