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An energy conservation approach to adsorbate-induced surface stress and the extraction of binding energy using nanomechanics

Lal A Pinnaduwage1,2, Vassil I Boiadjiev1,5, John E Hawk1, Anthony C Gehl1,2, Gayanath W Fernando3 and L C Rohana Wijewardhana4

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Surface stress induced by molecular adsorption in three different binding processes has been studied experimentally using a microcantilever sensor. A comprehensive free-energy analysis based on an energy conservation approach is proposed to explain the experimental observations. We show that when guest molecules bind to atoms/molecules on a microcantilever surface, the released binding energy is retained in the host surface, leading to a metastable state where the excess energy on the surface is manifested as an increase in surface stress leading to the bending of the microcantilever. The released binding energy appears to be almost exclusively channeled to the surface energy, and energy distribution to other channels, including heat, appears to be inactive for this micromechanical system. When this excess surface energy is released, the microcantilever relaxes back to the original state, and the relaxation time depends on the particular binding process involved. Such vapor phase experiments were conducted for three binding processes: physisorption, hydrogen bonding, and chemisorption. Binding energies for these three processes were also estimated.


PACS

81.07.-b Nanoscale materials and structures: fabrication and characterization

Subjects

Nanoscale science and low-D systems

Dates

Issue 10 (12 March 2008)

Received 10 November 2007, in final form 7 December 2007

Published 13 February 2008



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