March 22, 2001
Journal Article

Control of Amorphous Solid Water Morphology using Molecular Beams - I: Experimental Results

Abstract

The adsorption of N2 was used to investigate the porosity/morphology of thin films of amorphous solid water. Molecular beams were used to vapor deposit amorphous solid water films on a Pt(111) crystal at a variety of incident growth angles. The amount of N2 adsorbed by the amorphous solid water depends very sensitively on the growth angle and thermal history of the film. For normal and nearly normal incidence growth, the water films are relatively dense and smooth and adsorb only a small amount of N2. For larger growth angles, the films are porous and adsorb large quantities of N2 with apparent surface areas as high as ~2700 m2/g. The physical and chemical properties of amorphous solid water are of interest because of its presence in astrophysical environments. The observations have important implications for laboratory studies which use vapor deposited amorphous solid water films as analogs for astrophysical icy bodies such as comets.

Revised: August 30, 2007 | Published: March 22, 2001

Citation

Kimmel G.A., K.P. Stevenson, Z. Dohnalek, R.S. Smith, and B.D. Kay. 2001. Control of Amorphous Solid Water Morphology using Molecular Beams - I: Experimental Results. Journal of Chemical Physics 114, no. 12:5284-5294. PNNL-SA-33253.