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Journal article

Mechanism of melting in submonolayer films of nitrogen molecules adsorbed on the basal planes of graphite

From

Physical Chemistry, Department of Chemistry, Technical University of Denmark1

Department of Chemistry, Technical University of Denmark2

University of Missouri3

The melting mechanism in submonolayer films of N-2 molecules adsorbed on the basal planes of graphite is studied using molecular-dynamics simulations. The melting is strongly correlated with the formation of vacancies in the films. As the temperature increases, the edges of the submonolayer patch become atomically rough and vacancies are first created there.

Then there is an onset temperature at which the vacancies penetrate into the patch. At an intermediate region of coverages similar to 0.3-0.8 commensurate layers, there is sufficient free volume for the film to melt at that temperature. At higher coverages, similar to 0.8-1.0 layers, a solid with defects is formed, and additional free volume must be created by higher energy mechanisms such as layer promotion for melting to occur; thus, the melting temperature rises with coverage.

In contrast, for very small patches, the atomically rough Bone penetrates the entire patch at a lower temperature where the film melts. The calculated melting temperatures are significantly lower than observed experimentally, indicating a severe fault in the potential model. A possible source of the discrepancy is identified.

Language: English
Year: 1995
Pages: 8515-8527
ISSN: 10953795 , 01631829 , 1550235x and 24699950
Types: Journal article
DOI: 10.1103/PhysRevB.52.8515

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