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Intermittent molecular hopping at the solid-liquid interface

The mobility of molecules on a solid surface plays a key role in diverse phenomena such as friction and self-assembly and in surface-based technologies like heterogeneous catalysis and molecular targeting. To understand and control these surface processes, a universally applicable model of surface t...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Physical review letters 2013-06, Vol.110 (25), p.256101-256101, Article 256101
Main Authors: Skaug, Michael J, Mabry, Joshua, Schwartz, Daniel K
Format: Article
Language:English
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Summary:The mobility of molecules on a solid surface plays a key role in diverse phenomena such as friction and self-assembly and in surface-based technologies like heterogeneous catalysis and molecular targeting. To understand and control these surface processes, a universally applicable model of surface transport at solid-liquid interfaces is needed. However, unlike diffusion at a solid-gas interface, little is known about the mechanisms of diffusion at a solid-liquid interface. Using single-molecule tracking at a solid-liquid interface, we found that a diverse set of molecules underwent intermittent random walks with non-Gaussian displacements. This contrasts with the normal random walk and Gaussian statistics that are commonly assumed for molecular surface diffusion. The molecules became temporarily immobilized for random waiting times between surface displacements produced by excursions through the bulk fluid. A common power-law distribution of waiting times indicated a spectrum of binding energies. We propose that intermittent hopping is universal to molecular surface diffusion at a solid-liquid interface.
ISSN:0031-9007
1079-7114
DOI:10.1103/physrevlett.110.256101