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rdf:type
lifeskim:mentions
pubmed:issue
10
pubmed:dateCreated
2008-9-26
pubmed:abstractText
Excess electrons in polar media, such as water or ice, are screened by reorientation of the surrounding molecular dipoles. This process of electron solvation is of vital importance for various fields of physical chemistry and biology as, for instance, in electrochemistry or photosynthesis. Generation of such excess electrons in bulk water involves either photoionization of solvent molecules or doping with e.g. alkali atoms, involving possibly perturbing interactions of the system with the parent-cation. Such effects are avoided when using a surface science approach to electron solvation: in the case of polar adsorbate layers on metal surfaces, the substrate acts as an electron source from where photoexcited carriers are injected into the adlayer. Besides the investigation of electron solvation at such interfaces, this approach allows for the investigation of heterogeneous electron transfer, as the excited solvated electron population continuously decays back to the metal substrate. In this manner, electron transfer and solvation processes are intimately connected at any polar adsorbate-metal interface. In this tutorial review, we discuss recent experiments on the ultrafast dynamics of photoinduced electron transfer and solvation processes at amorphous ice-metal interfaces. Femtosecond time-resolved two-photon photoelectron spectroscopy is employed as a direct probe of the electron dynamics, which enables the analysis of all elementary processes: the charge injection across the interface, the subsequent electron localization and solvation, and the dynamics of electron transfer back to the substrate. Using surface science techniques to grow and characterize various well-defined ice structures, we gain detailed insight into the correlation between adsorbate structure and electron solvation dynamics, the location (bulk versus surface) of the solvation site, and the role of the electronic structure of the underlying metal substrate on the electron transfer rate.
pubmed:language
eng
pubmed:journal
pubmed:status
PubMed-not-MEDLINE
pubmed:month
Oct
pubmed:issn
0306-0012
pubmed:author
pubmed:issnType
Print
pubmed:volume
37
pubmed:owner
NLM
pubmed:authorsComplete
Y
pubmed:pagination
2180-90
pubmed:year
2008
pubmed:articleTitle
A surface science approach to ultrafast electron transfer and solvation dynamics at interfaces.
pubmed:affiliation
Freie Universität Berlin, Fachbereich Physik, Arnimallee 14, 14195 Berlin, Germany.
pubmed:publicationType
Journal Article