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Picosecond dynamics of surface electron transfer processes: Surface restricted transient grating studies of the n-Ti0 2 /H 2 0 interface J. J. Kasinski, L. A. Gomez-Jahn, K. J. Faran,a) S. M. Gracewski,a) and R. J. Dwayne Miller Department of Chemistry and the Laboratory for Laser Energetics. University ofRochester. Rochester. New York 14627 (Received 2 March 1988; accepted 28 September 1988) The surface restricted transient grating is demonstrated as a sensitive probe of ultrafast surface reaction dynamics. Studies of doped single crystal n- Ti0 2 (00 1) surfaces in air demonstrate linear trapping processes, assigned to crystal defects within the surface deformation layer, that limit carrier lifetimes to 5 ns. Direct in situ grating studies at photochemically active n-Ti0 2/ H 0 interfaces demonstrate that the dominant mechanism of interfacial electron transfer in this system involves thermalized hole carriers at the atomic surface. The d~namics are. consistent with adsorbed OH- as the initial hole acceptor. In addition, optical generatIOn of coherent surface acoustic modes is demonstrated. A detailed theory is presented for the grating excitation ofthe surface acoustics. Acoustic propagation in the H 20 half-space of the Ti0 2/ H 2 0 liquid interface gives evidence for a phase change of the water layer at the polar Ti0 2 (001) surface to a solid phase. I. INTRODUCTION The abrupt phase discontinuity defined by a surface alters significantly the physics of a chemical reaction pathway. The static potential of the solid state surface has an ordering effect on the molecular system at the interface which, in tum, lowers activation barriers and enables the surface to act as a catalyst. Other surface reaction processes also involve direct participation of the surface through electronic interactions between the solid state lattice and the molecular adsorbates. In this regard, one of the most fundamental steps in a surface reaction sequence is that of electron transfer. In the presence of a phase boundary, the problem of understanding surface mediated electron transfer becomes more complicated than that in a homogeneous phase. In the context of solid interfaces, particular attention must be paid to the solid state aspects of the electron transfer step. The main problem is to accurately connect the electronic wave function of the periodic potential defined by the solid state lattice with that of the localized potential of the molecular acceptor which is strongly coupled to a continuum of nuclear bath modes in the adjacent gas or liquid phase. In consideration of solidliquid interfaces, the problem is further complicated by solvent dynamics. The orientating effects of the static potential of the surface should significantly alter the structure of polar fluids at the interfacial boundary. This restructuring is important as the overall dynamics of surface electron transfer processes are greatly influenced by the solvent repolarization which follows the buildup of charge density on an acceptor site. In the bulk, solvent reorganization is fairly well described by continuum models for dielectric relaxation. 1 However, at a surface, the high frequency dielectric properties are unknown and presumably different than the bulk as a result of this interaction between the polar solvent molecules and the charged surface. Similar problems occur in properly defining the atomic surface layer of the solid state lattice. a) Department of Mechanical Engineering, University of Rochester, Rochester, New York 14627. J. Chern. Phys. 90 (2), 15 January 1989 The break in lattice structure at the surface generally leads to bond rehybridization of the surface atoms and the formation of surface states which are not strongly coupled with the band states of the bulk solid state lattice. 2 Surface states are also formed by lattice vacancies, defects and chemical impurities. These surface states may act as either localized intermediates in the interfacial electron transfer process or compete with molecular acceptors as a charge transfer acceptor. The latter process leads to surface degradation. 3 A detailed understanding of surface mediated electron transfer processes needs to encompass both the coupling of two distinctly different phases through interfacial electron tunneling and the effects associated with the restructuring that occur on both sides of the atomic interface. The most successful treatments of surface mediated electron transfer assumed that electron transfer processes occur directly from the first few atomic layers of the solid state surface to acceptors directly adjacent to the surface. The free electron or hole vacancy in the solid state is assumed thermally equilibrated with the lattice and highly localized at the surface, i.e., thermalized surface band edge electron transfer processes. 4 However, in the context of electron transfer processes at semiconductor surfaces, it has been recently pointed out that efficient electron tunneling can occur from sites well below the surface at higher energies than the surface valence or conduction band edges, i.e., hot carrier injection. 5 Assuming isoenergetic states for the electron on both sides of the interface, the predicted dynamics for the two different electron transfer mechanisms differ by over two orders of magnitude. Ifhot carrier transfer mechanisms are dominant, formation of oxidized or reduced product states at the interface should occur on a 100 fs time scale. However, this mechanism requires that solvent repolarization at the interface occur on the same time scale to prevent back electron transfer. In aqueous systems, this would require near bulk dielectric properties at the interface. In contrast, thermalized surface electron transfer rates will be rate limited by either the transit time of the carrier to the surface 0021-9606/89/021253-17$02.10 @ 1989 American Institute of Physics 1253 Downloaded 22 Apr 2011 to 171.66.54.152. Redistribution subject to AIP license or copyright; see http://jcp.aip.org/about/rights_and_permissions 1254 Kasinski et al.: Surface electron transfer processes or the energy relaxation of the carrier through optical phonon emission. The space charge region (depletion layer) ofthe semiconductor is expected to be highly quantized due to the confining potential formed by the space charge field and the Helmholtz barrier. 6 These quantization effects should change the thermalization process from single phonon events to multiphonon emission which is much slower. 5.7 From this line of reasoning, thermalized band edge electron transfer should occur on a 10-100 ps time scale or slower. Processes faster than this time scale would have a significant electron transfer component from thermally unequilibrated levels. Based on the large difference in the dynamics for the two mechanisms of interfacial electron transfer, it is possible to determine the dominant operating mechanism at the interface using time domain techniques. This determination would uniquely define the spatial and energetic coordinates of the electron transfer step which is essential to a detailed understanding of this event. To date, there have been few experimental studies of this kind. The best attained resolution has been in the nanosecond to subnanosecond time scale which is insufficient to resolve the physics of the actual interfacial electron transfer step. 8 Herein, we describe a surface restricted transient grating method as a new approach to studying surface reaction dynamics which is capable of optical pulse width limited resolution (1O- 13 _1O- 12s) along with submonolayer sensitivity. This method is used in conjunction with efficient semiconductor liquid junctions to provide both an optical trigger for the electron transfer process and to act as an electric field focusing element for carriers photogenerated within the space charge region. The field focusing of the junction makes the technique sensitive to the atomic surface layer. The information content of the surface grating image is high, as will be discussed in detail below. The surface grating technique can be used to selectively measure interfacial electron transfer dynamics or the competing processes (e.g., surface state trapping) by control of the junction. In addition, we have demonstrated for the first time that coherent surface acoustic waves can be optically generated by the grating image. The surface wave deformation offers a unique, highly surface specific, probe of the interface structure and interactions whereas the frequency response of the surface acoustics provide a sensitive measurement of carrier thermal relaxation processes at the semiconductor surface. The large amount of information that can be obtained from surface restricted grating spectroscopy makes this technique a multifaceted probe of both surface reaction dynamics and structure. The specific system used in these studies was the n- Ti0 2 aqueous liquidjunction (Ti0 2IH2 OIOH-) which has been predicted to show significant unthermalized electron tunneling or hot carrier effects. 5 These predictions were based on an extremely small effective mass of the hole carrier (the minority carrier) which is involved in the interfacial charge transfer step. The hole carrier effective mass of Ti0 2 has reported hole mass values of 0.01 me. 9 Such small minority carrier masses would lead to strong quantization of the space charge region. Space charge quantization is essential in preventing thermal relaxation of the hole carrier from decou- pling supraband edge electronic energy levels from the elec. tron transfer mechanism. From this consideration, the n- Ti0 2!H2 junction is an important test case for interfacial charge transfer models based on long range tunneling of thermally unequilibrated carriers. This system is also important in its own right as this was the first system to demonstrate photodissociation of water to oxygen and hydrogen under solar fluences. Its important role in the development of semiconductor liquid junctions make it an important model system to understand interfacial charge transfer and surface reaction processes in general. ° II. SURFACE RESTRICTED TRANSIENT GRATING SPECTROSCOPY OF SURFACES A. Studies of carrier dynamics Surface reactions are considerably more complex than reactions in a homogeneous phase. The overall reaction often involves numerous intermediates and reaction product channels. For this reason, the major emphasis in understanding surface chemistry has been on the atomic structure of the interface at single crystal surfaces. Models are based on correlating reaction mechanisms with structure. An alternative approach to surface reactivity is to study the dynamics of the reaction process directly by using picosecond spectroscopic techniques. The optical pulse sequences used in picosecond spectroscopy provide very narrow filters for the study of reaction processes. Provided the steps in the reaction process yield optically distinct intermediates, each individual step can be studied selectively and the overall reaction mechanism can be determined. 10 The main problem to overcome in extending picosecond spectroscopy to the study of surface reaction dynamics is a technical one. Optical techniques, with a few exceptions such as surface enhanced spontaneous Ramanll(a) or coherent anti-Stokes Raman scattering in waveguidesll(b) and second harmonic generation,12 are generally not surface specific. Bulk contributions to the optical probe normally dominate the spectroscopy. An additional problem, exclusive to time domain techniques, is that the surface reaction sequence must be optically triggered in phase to give a well defined time origin for the reaction sequence. Transient grating spectroscopy, used in conjunction with semiconductor liquid junctions, represents a solution to the above technical problems. The transient grating technique has been extensively developed over the years. 13 The general features of the transient grating technique as applied to semiconductor surfaces are shown in Fig. 1. Two time coincident above band gap excitation pulses are used to image an optical interference pattern on the semiconductor surface. The above band gap excitation promotes an electron from the valence band to the conduction band forming an electron-hole pair which degenerates into free carriers (see Fig. 7). The spatial modulation of the carrier popUlation creates a spatially sinusoidal variation in the material index of refraction which exactly mimics the optical interference pattern. A holographic diffraction grating is formed which can be probed by monitoring the diffraction efficiency as a function of time with a variably delayed probe pulse. The grating image decays ac- J. Chern. Phys., Vol. 90, No.2, 15 January 1989 Downloaded 22 Apr 2011 to 171.66.54.152. Redistribution subject to AIP license or copyright; see http://jcp.aip.org/about/rights_and_permissions Kasinski et al.: Surface electron transfer processes \ 1+1 FIG. 1. Surface restricted transient grating spectroscopy. An optical interference pattern generated by two crossed excitation pulses is holographically encoded in 'he semiconductor surface as a diffraction grating in the form of electron-h. ,Ie pairs. The carrier population dynamics are monitored by their diffraction efficiency at below band gap frequencies into the ± 1 order of diffraction. The crystal surface is part of a liquid junction (n-type is shown). The space charge field of the junction focuses the minority carrier to the surface, conserving the grating image, to give virtually atomic surface selectivity. Nonradiative carrier relaxation processes in the grating image also excite single frequency surface acoustic modes-shown as a sinusoidal surface displacement of height WOo cording to the carrier population and thus measures directly the dynamics of carrier trapping and interfacial electron transfer processes. The initial surface selectivity to these processes is given by the very short optical penetration depth of semiconductors to above band gap excitation. Depending on the excitation wavelength, these values range from 100--2000 A for both direct and indirect gap semiconductors. In the case of indirect gap semiconductors, the excitation must involve a direct transition, i.e., blue of the band edge. The surface selectivity is highly enhanced by the use of semiconductor liquidjunctions. 3,14 An intense space charge field is associated with liquid junctions which is exactly analogous to abrupt metal-semiconductor Schottky junctions. The space charge field arises from electron exchange processes that equilibrate the chemical potential across the solid-liquid interface. The overall effect is that majority carriers are depleted at the surface leaving ionized impurities in the surface layer forming a space charge electric field. The width of the space charge field and hence the electric field depends on the background carrier concentration. The width can be varied from a 100 A to 1000 A range by varying the semiconductor doping level, i.e., fields from lO4 to - 106 VI cm. The width of the space charge region is comparable to the optical 11e penetration depth. Electron-hole pairs optically generated within the space charge field are separated by the electric field. These pick up a drift velocity component in the space charge field which causes vectorial transport of the minority carrier 1255 to the surface and the majority carrier to the bulk. The enormous electric fields present within the space charge region drives the minority carrier to the surface on a picosecond to subpicosecond timescale. In the hot carrier model, this transport process is assumed to be ballistic. In either case, the carrier is rapidly transported to within tunneling distances from the surface. By this field focusing effect, the grating image becomes essentially atomic surface selective. This surface selectivity is achieved in the absence of any nonlinear interaction of the optical field with the atomic surface, in contrast to second harmonic generation or surface enhanced Raman scattering. In addition to enhancing the surface selectivity, the semiconductor liquid junction provides an optical trigger for the interfacial electron transfer process. The separation of the electron hole pairs prevents surface induced or bulk electron-hole pair recombination from complicating the dynamics. Minority carriers optically created on resonance with molecular acceptors will tunnel across the interface either through a hot carrier or thermally equilibrated charge transfer mechanism. The quantum yield for interfacial charge transfer is well characterized at these interfaces and is near unity. The transient grating signal is determined by the diffraction efficiency of the grating image. Light diffraction of the surface grating is described within the Raman-Nath limit to light diffraction, i.e.,13(a) / ~ = rJ~ (21Ttlnd lAp), (1) /0 where / m is the diffracted light intensity of the mth order, J m is an mth order Bessel function, d is the grating thickness, Ap is the probe wavelength, and tlli is the spatially periodic change in the complex index of refraction. In principle the grating diffraction efficiency can be probed by either above band gap or below band gap probes. The high absorptivity of semiconductors to above band gap light would necessitate monitoring the grating in reflection rather than in transmission. However, the larger background scattered light and strong absorption of the probe limit the use of above gap probes. For below band gap probes, the amplitude component to the thin grating is negligible and the diffraction efficiency (1]) in the first order is described by a thin phase grating. 13(a),15 (2) where only changes in the index of refraction (tln) contribute to the signal. The spatial geometry of the excitation and probe beams of the grating is defined by . sm () ± 1 . Ap = sm (}j ± A ' (3) where () ± 1 and (}j are the angles of the first orders of diffraction of the probe beam relative to the surface normal (see Fig. 1). A is the grating fringe spacing which is given by A= Aex , (4) 2 sin (}ex whereA ex is the wavelength of the above band gap excitation J. Chern. Phys., Vol. 90, No.2, 15 January 1989 Downloaded 22 Apr 2011 to 171.66.54.152. Redistribution subject to AIP license or copyright; see http://jcp.aip.org/about/rights_and_permissions Kasinski et al.: Surface electron transfer processes 1256 and (}ex is the half-angle between the two grating excitation pulses. In consideration of just the photogenerated carrier dynamics, the index of refraction change upon the photoexcitation of electron-hole pairs can be approximated by the Drude model for the optical properties of the quasifree carriers. The periodic index of refraction change is then given byl6 2 2nm eh(t)p€O ' (5) where N is the number density of photogenerated carriers, e is the fundamental electron charge, meh is the effective reduced mass of the electron-hole pair [meh = (11m: + limn -\], and (t)p is the radial probe frequency. This periodic change in the real part of the index of refraction from photogenerated free carriers is found to be the dominant term in the light diffraction process as will be discussed below. 15, 16 There are other possible optical effects following electron hole pair generation, such as band gap renormalization or bound exciton resonances, that can also contribute to the grating. \3 In the case of Ti02 which is a high dielectric, indirect gap, semiconductor these optical components are negligible in comparison to the free carrier absorption and dispersion components described by Eq. (5) for probes well red of the band gap origin. The important feature of the grating signal is that both the electron and hole carrier densities contribute to the signal. The exact contribution from each carrier depends inversely on the carrier reduced mass [Eq. (5)]. Depending on the relative magnitudes of the effective masses, the grating measures the population dynamics of either the electron or hole carriers. For Ti0 2 , the grating image would be expected to monitor fairly exclusively the hole carrier dynamics based on reported hole and electron effective masses (m~ ~0.01 me' m: ~30 me ).5,9 In other semiconductors the carrier effective masses are nearly the same such that both carrier population densities contribute equally to the signal. The grating decay gives a direct measurement of electron and hole carrier population dynamics. The optically generated carriers may decay by either solid state recombination processes or interfacial charge transfer. The decrease in the grating image is irrespective of the image conservation in the interfacial electron transfer event or surface state trapping. The subsequent change in optical properties of the molecular acceptors or surface trap sites, at the probe wavelengths used, is at least an order of magnitude smaller than the depletion of the free carrier grating image within the semiconductor surface. Basically, the surface state traps and molecular charge acceptors represent localized states which are offresonance from the probe and are less polarizable than the free carriers. Thus, in the high quantum limit for interfacial electron transfer, the transient grating signal selectively measures the surface electron transfer dynamics through the charge transfer depletion of the minority carrier population. B. Theoretical treatment of the optical generation of surface acoustics Experimentally we have determined that the grating image also excites a single frequency surface acoustic mode. These results will be discussed below. The exact coupling and spatial relationship of the surface displacements need to be determined to assign the surface acoustics. This section presents an analytical solution for elastic waves generated at a surface by transient grating excitation. Assuming any other boundaries of the solid are far enough away from the surface of interest such that reflections do not return during the experimental time scale, the solid can be modeled as a halfspace with a coordinate system as shown in Fig 1. The solution will be derived for a homogeneous, isotropic, linearly elastic halfspace with a traction free surface. The excitation grating will generate a heating pattern within the interference region which will be sinusoidal along the solid surface and will decay exponentially with depth. A previous treatment of the problem neglected the finite optical penetration on the surface displacement which is critical to surface vs bulk acoustic excitation. 17 We make the following assumptions: ( 1) the excitation pulse and carrier thermal relaxation times are much shorter than the acoustic time constant, such that the heat deposition is considered to be instantaneous; (2) thermal diffusion will be neglected as it is at least two orders of magnitude slower in affecting material displacement than sound propagation. Therefore, the induced temperature rise a T will have a step function time dependence aT(x,z,t) = Tmax e- az (1 +sinbx)H(t), (6) where Tmax is the maximum temperature rise, a is the depth decay constant or absorptivity, b = 211'/A, and H(t) is the unit step function. c. Problem formulation The resulting displacements u and w in the x and z directions, respectively, satisfy the governing equations, (A 2 ax axaz au =p at 2 a2w) 2 + J-l) (-a u + ----;::2 azax az- + p,V w aw a2w) u++ J-l) (-a2 - + J-lV 2U - a'(3,.1, a(an + 2p,)-- ax 2 (7a) 2 ' (A a'(3,.1, a(an + 2J-l) - az 2 =p al 2 ' (7b) throughout the region z> 0, where V2=~+~ 2 ax ar is the two-dimensional Laplacian operator, p is the density, a' is the thermal expansion coefficient, and A and J-l are the Lame constants. Traction-free boundary conditions are applied atz = 0 = 0, where 1'ij (iJ 1'ZZ 1'zx = 0, x,y,z) are the components ofthe stress tensor l' and are related to the displacements for a linear-elastic, isotropic media byl8 1'ij =,.1, aUk (au.' +-' au.) k2: -aX- {kj i j +J-l aX ax; , 3 I (8) j where {jij is the Kronecker delta. The radiation condition must also be satisfied as z -> 00. J. Chern. Phys., Vol. 90, No.2, 15 January 1989 Downloaded 22 Apr 2011 to 171.66.54.152. Redistribution subject to AIP license or copyright; see http://jcp.aip.org/about/rights_and_permissions 1257 Kasinski sf a/.: Surface electron transfer processes In the applied temperature field, only the term which varies sinusoidally with x will generate surface acoustic waves. Results presented below correspond to this term. The term which is independent of x will cause a uniform, onedimensional expansion which can easily be determined and added to the solution. However, since this uniform expansion is independent of x, it will not diffract the detection pulse and therefore cannot be observed experimentally. In the derivation, the complete details of which are presented elsewhere, 19 the closed-form solution for time harmonic excitation is first obtained by integral transform methods. The final solution for the applied temperature field with a unit step time dependence is then obtained by integrating the time harmonic solutions appropriately over all frequencies. The displacements are represented in the form, U = Kb cos bx 2rr I'1m Joo m_O - [A'( w ) e - r,z + A" () w Yte - r,z Exponential temperature decay ... '~~ * I 1 q II) +"1 C IDo ~1 J:l:;j 5}-1 0 0 'I' o I' o d+-______ -,______-.________.-______, 0.0 1.0 2.0 3.0 4.0 Time FIG. 2. Theoretical results for surface displacement. Calculated displacement is in units of time normalized to the surface acoustic period. The surface displacement is normalized relative to the acoustic wave vector (21TIA). 00 (9) + A" (w)b 2e - r,z + ae - az] ( 10) where (lla) [4b2Yta- (2b 2 -w 2Ic;)]IR(w), 2 ( llb) A "(w) = 2(2b 2 - w /c;)( YI - a)R(w), 2 2 R(w) = (2b -w2Ic;) -4b YIYt (the Rayleigh wave A'(w) = (llc) equation), YI = (b 2 _W 2/cy)1/2, K = a'(3..i + 21t) T ..i + 21t max' Yt = (b 2 _W 2/c;)1/2, (lId) (lIe) and C1 and C t are the bulk longitudinal and transverse wave speeds, respectively. The complicated nature of the above solution reflects the fact that the surface displacement involves both transverse and longitudinal motion which gives rise to two coupled wave equations [Eqs. (7 a) and (7b)]. The theoretical calculations of the surface displacement are shown in Fig. 2. There are two main features to this solution. The first is that the maximum surface displacement occurs at one half an acoustic cycle from t = 0, the thermal impulse, in analogy to previous treatments of bulk acoustics. 20 The position of the surface expansion (negative z displacement) is spatially coincident with the constructive regions of optical interference. This point becomes important in assigning the sign of the free carrier optical properties. In addition, there is a very interesting feature in the surface displacement which appears as a discontinuity in the temporal behavior near t = O. This rise in the surface displacement is caused by the thermally driven lattice expansion of the region defined by the very short optical penetration depth. The time scale of this expansion is determined by the length scale (a - I) over which the surface layer is optically heated, and the speed of sound along the surface normal. In the case of Ti0 2 , the ratio of the optical penetration depth to the acoustic wavelength (a - IIA) is I :20. This difference explains the much faster rise in the surface displacement from the nonpropagating thermal expansion relative to the surface displacement from the excited coherent surface acoustic mode. Further, the theoretical results demonstrate that for highly confined heating of the surface layer, the material displacement will lead to selective excitation of a pure surface acoustic wave (SAW). Also, the results show the excited SAW has two counterpropagating components due to the symmetry of the thermal expansion process along the grating wave vector. A standing SAW is excited which leads to the beat patterns observed in Fig. 2 in the surface displacement. The resulting wave field depends on the ratio alb which determines the relative weighting ofthe bulk longitudinal contribution to the surface displacement [see Eqs. (9) and (10)]. As the optical penetration depth and thermal heated surface layer increase in thickness, there is a gradual transition to the excitation of bulk longitudinal acoustic modes as expected. For Ti02 at 355 nm excitation (a::::: 8 X 104 cm - I, b = 2.4 X 104 em - I), thermal relaxation is expected to lead to selective excitation of a surface acoustic wave. The effects of finite nonradiative relaxation times can also be incorporated into the problem. As shown previously,21 the thermalization dynamics can be measured in the limit the time constants are comparable to a quarter acoustic cycle. Thermalization times equal to or greater than an acoustic cycle would lead to cancellation effects and elimination of coherence in the SAW excitation. This effect can be put in numerically or analytically. Quantitative measurements of carrier thermalization can be made by determining the frequency response of the coherent SAW amplitude. The temporal resolution is limited to -30 GHz (15 ps) using prism coupling to achieve the highest possible SAW frequencies. As with the detection of the carrier dynamics, the optically generated SAWs are observed by light diffraction. The propagation of coherent SAW modes on the surface leads to J. Chern. Phys., Vol. 90, No.2, 15 January 1989 Downloaded 22 Apr 2011 to 171.66.54.152. Redistribution subject to AIP license or copyright; see http://jcp.aip.org/about/rights_and_permissions 1258 Kasinski et al.: Surface electron transfer processes OPTICAL FIBER L2 O.S., M.L., Nd:YAG Gl FIG. 3. Experimental set up. The n-Ti02 crystals are housed in a three electrode liquid junction photocell shown at the three beam crossing point. PC = Pockels POL = polarizer, cell, L = lens, A. /2 = half-wave plate, V.D. = variable delay P.O. = photodiode, line, G = grating, B.S. = beam splitter, 2 X = KTP doubling crystal, 3 X = RDP summing crystal. L7 the formation of a diffraction grating in the form of a corrugated surface. The spatially sinusoidal surface displacement diffracts light in superposition to the carrier phase grating, which turns out to be an extremely sensitive method of detecting surface acoustics. This point will be discussed at length below. III. EXPERIMENTAL The experimental set up is shown in Fig 3. The laser is a cw pumped, Q-switched and mode locked Y AG. The novel feature is the use of a fiber optic based pulse compressor to develop a very stable source of 3 ps, /-LJ pulses at repetition rates up to 1 kHz without amplification. Details of the fiber optic grating pulse compressor have been previously described. 22 A microwave triode driven Pockels cell was used to select a single pulse from the Q-switched pulse train envelope. The selected and compressed 1.064/-Lm pulse was doubled in a KTP crystal and the 0.532 /-Lm harmonic was further summed in an RDP crystal with a pulse from the rejected IR pulse train off the Pockels cell polarizer. This summing procedure gave approximately 1 /-LJ pulses both at 355 and 532 nm. The surface grating was written on n-Ti0 2 single crystal (00 1) surfaces (Commercial Crystal Labs) using above band gap excitation at 355 nm with a 5· angle between the excitation beams to avoid carrier diffusion effects. With this small angle, carrier diffusion along the grating wave vector limits the grating image to a 1/e lifetime of 1 /-Ls which is a negligible effect on the nanosecond time scale of the experiment. The 532 nm pulse was used as the below band gap probe which was brought in at normal incidence to monitor the grating dynamics. The first order diffracted probe signal was isolated with an iris and detected with an UV filtered PIN photodiode. The timing between the grating excitation pulse sequence and the probe pulse was adjusted with a motorized corner cube drawn along a precision lathe bed with a voltage readout proportional to the position displacement. The diffracted probe signal and probe pulse delay were processed with a lock-in and X-Yrecorder combination. Data was collected at 500 Hz with the excitation beam chopped at halfthe laser repetition rate and single shot excitation conditions were varied from 3 X 1013 photons/cm2 to 3 X 10 15 photons/cm2. Under these conditions the diffraction efficiencies varied from <10 - 8 to 10 - 6, respectively. The semiconductor liquid junction was constructed using the n- Ti0 2 crystal as an optical window of a three electrode aqueous cell with a saturated calomel electrode (SCE) and platinum mesh counter electrode. The Ti0 2 crystal was placed over a hole drilled through a fused quartz window and was mounted using a high pH resistant epoxy. The aqueous electrolyte used in all cases was 0.01-1 M NaOH and 1M Na2S04 in distilled water. The n-Ti0 2 crystals were mechanically polished to A. /10 optical quality and then doped in a hydrogen furnace. The hydrogen pressure was kept at 1 atm and the doping controlled by varying the exposure time to temperatures ranging from 400-600 ·C. The samples became deep blue at high dopings and virtually opaque at carrier concentrations above 10 19 carriers/cm 3 • This concentration was the highest usable concentration for a 532 nm probe. The surfaces were chemically etched in concentrated H2 S04 after the reduction step, washed in distilled water and methanol, and air dried. Carrier concentrations, along with flat band potentials, were measured by MottSchottky plots prior to the experiment. The carrier concentrations and flat band potentials were determined from the linear portion of these plots. 23 Ohmic contacts were made with an indium/gallium eutetic rubbed onto the back surface such that a 5 mm strip was left open for probe transmis- J. Chern. Phys., Vol. 90, No.2, 15 January 1989 Downloaded 22 Apr 2011 to 171.66.54.152. Redistribution subject to AIP license or copyright; see http://jcp.aip.org/about/rights_and_permissions Kasinski et al.: Surface electron transfer processes 1259 facial electron transfer. However, the higher order recombination processes may become dominant at high doping levels. This point is especially relevant given that in order to minimize carrier trapping losses and maximize the quantum yield for interfacial electron transfer, semiconductor crystals are usually highly doped in the 10 18/cm 3 to 10 19/cm 3 range. Increased doping decreases the width of the space charge region and, thereby, increases the magnitude of the electric field that drives the minority carriers to the surface. This effect minimizes the residence time of the carriers in the depletion layer where trapping rates are much higher than in the bulk. 25 ,26 There is normally a trade off in quantum efficiency between decreased residence time within the depletion layer and the fraction of light absorbed within that region. In addition to this consideration, the hot carrier model of interfacial electron transfer requires high doping levels to provide narrow space charge regions which are highly quantized. 5 At high doping levels, Auger recombination may become the dominant recombination mechanism that limits electron-hole carrier lifetimes. Therefore, the exact nature of the solid state processes that compete with surface mediated electron transfer need to be experimentally addressed. Transient grating results for an n- Ti0 2 crystal with a donor concentration of 8.2X 10 18 carriers/cm 3 is shown in Fig. 4. The grating decays are nonexponential as expected for either surface state trapping or higher order recombination processes. (The lie effective decay time is 5.0 ns). An excitation power dependence was conducted in the range from 3 X 1020 photogenerated carriers/cm 3 down to 10 18/ cm 3• 19 Above 3 X 10 19 photogenerated carriers/cm 3, the decays are dominated by a fast higher order recombination component whose relative intensity and decay rate decreases with decreasing excitation power. At excitation conditions below 3 X 10 19/cm 3, the decays were no longer power dependent and, for a number of crystals with donor concentrations sion. The platinum counter electrode was connected to the ohmic contact with silver epoxy. The cell was operated under either short circuit or open circuit conditions with the Ti0 2 potential monitored relative to the SeE reference electrode. The potential was maintained with a well regulated variable power supply. To avoid space charge accumulation effects, the liquid junction cell was translated at 5 cm/s in front of the excitation beams to ensure that each laser shot sampled a surface fully equilibrated with the aqueous redox couple. The signal intensity was found not to vary for different points along the crystal surface which indicates a uniform surface preparation. Surface inhomogenieties are on a much shorter length scale than the laser spot sizes. IV • RESULTS AND DISCUSSION A. Carrier dynamics 1. Surface trapping studies in air The first experiments were conducted on n-Ti0 2 in air as a control. Under ideal conditions, there is no junction formed and the valence and conduction bands are flat. This study determines the effective rates of electron-hole pair recombination processes that compete for interfacial electron transfer on the solid side of the interface. Under these conditions, the lifetime of the photogenerated electron-hole pairs within the semiconductor can be expressed as an expansion, 15 i.e., 1lreh = AN + BN 2 + eN J + "', where the linear term refers to trapping of carriers at either bulk or surface traps, the bimolecular term refers to radiative electronhole recombination, and the last term refers to Auger recombination. Generally, radiative lifetimes and bulk trapping processes by impurities occur on a 100 ns time scale. With the very short optical penetration at above band gap excitation (-1000 A, at 355 nm), surface state trapping processes are expected to be the dominant competing pathway to inter- FIG. 4. Transient grating signal from (doping concentration = 8.2X 1OIs/cc) in air (nonexponential with a 5 ns "1/e" time). This decay is essentially independent of doping concentration, sample, and excitation power (-1 X 10 14 photons/em'). The small periodic oscillations visible are due to surface acoustic waves. n-TiO, o 2 3 4 :I 6 7 TIME (nsec) J. Chern. Phys .• Vol. 90, No.2. 15 January 1989 Downloaded 22 Apr 2011 to 171.66.54.152. Redistribution subject to AIP license or copyright; see http://jcp.aip.org/about/rights_and_permissions Kasinski et al.: Surface electron transfer processes 1260 ranging from 1016_1019/cm3, were identical (within 5% for the 1/e decay time) to that of Fig. 4. These results indicate that higher order electron-hole recombination processes are not dominant for carrier densities less than 10 19/cm 3. The grating decay, then, must be due to linear trapping processes. Previous studies ofidentically prepared crystals have found bulk recombination dynamics to be on the near J.Ls I II (t) = Ji { * 1Te2 2 2A.p nmeh {i}p€o Sa"" time scale. S(d) Therefore, the nonexponential decays must be due to trapping processes associated with a high trapping region near the surface. These dynamics can be described by diffusion subject to recombination at the surface with a constant surface recombination velocity. The predicted grating signal of this model can be calculated from Eqs. (12)-( 14 ).15 f1N(z,t)dz } , (12) 0 f1N(Z,t)=No ex p(- 4rDt __t__ ~)(w[a(Dt)1/2_ Z ]+w[a(Dt)1/2+ Z ] A2 7R 4Dt 2(Dt) 1/2 2(Dt) 1/2 _ W(x) 2S/D (S /D) - a = exp(x2 )erfc(x), {w[a(Dt)1/2+ Z 2(Dt) 1/2 ] - (14) where II (t) is the diffracted light intensity, J I is the first order Bessel function, f1N(z,t) is the peak-null electronhole pair density difference, No is the initial excess carrier density at the surface, D is the ambipo1ar diffusion constant, Sis the surface recombination velocity, and all other parameters are as defined previously. In our case, S is the only unknown constant. A typical numerical result is compared to grating data for a 4X 1O ls /cm 3 doped n-Ti0 2 sample in Fig. 5. In this figure, the surface acoustic modulation of the signal, which is discussed below, was subtracted from the data. This calculation is a convolution ofEq. (12) with the grating pulse shape response. Ti0 2 is a somewhat radical case in that its ambipolar diffusion constant (0.0134 cm 2/s) is extremely small compared to that of other semiconductors. S(d).27 For this value of D, calculations with Eq. ( 12) are fairly insensitive to S. In fact, curves with S ranging from 104 to 107 cm/s are identical to within 1% of that of Fig. 5. Only for S < 104 cm/s does the numerical result significantly deviate from the data. In the n- Ti0 2 in-air case, then, this is a mathematical fit with essentially no adjustable parameters. From the good agreement of the fit, the data is well described by this model of nonradiative trapping and recombination at the surface with a surface recombination velocity ;;;. 104 cm/s. The theoretical fits are much more sensitive to changes in the ambipolar diffusion constant ( ± 10%) than the surface recombination velocity. The good agreement between the theoretical fit and the observed grating dynamics illustrates that the carrier dynamics for the in-air studies are under flat band conditions or essentially zero space charge field. In general, the presence of impurities on semiconductor surfaces in air leads to the formation of charged surface states and a significant space charge field even in the absence of a liquid junction. The surface charge corresponds closely to the typical surface state densities of 1012/cm2 • For Ti0 2 , the dielectric constant is very large such that this level of surface charge would represent less than 0.02 eV of band bending. The width of this space charge field (-60 A) would affect the transport of less than 5% of the optically generated carriers. It is for this reason that flat band dynam- w[S (Dt)1/2 Z ]}) D + 2(Dt) 1/2 ' (13) I ics are observed for the in air studies of Ti0 2 • In contrast, in the presence of aleV liquid junction, the surface charge is on the order of 10 14/cm 2 with a space charge field of several hundred Angstroms. In this case, a significant fraction of the carriers are generated within the space charge field. The inair studies serve as a control for the affects of the space charge field on the hole carrier dynamics. The above surface recombination dynamics also suggest something about the exact nature of the surface state traps in Ti0 2 • To determine whether or not the traps are chemisorbed (OH- )s' control experiments were conducted under flat band conditions where the surface coverage of chemisorbed (OH-)s was varied. This was controlled by varying the pH of the aqueous solution used to treat the surface. Similar experiments were conducted with the crystals in contact with an aqueous electrolyte under open circuit conditions where an applied external voltage bias was used to keep the crystal under flat band conditions. The Ti0 2 potential relative to the seE reference electrode changes in a (A) (8) o 246 TIME (NSEc) 8 FIG. 5. Comparison of transient grating data and surface state trapping calculations. (A) Calculated signal response from Eqs. (\ 2), (\3), and (14) using S = 105 cm/s. This is essentially independent of S for S> 10' cm/s. (B) Actual transient grating data from n-TiO, (doping concentration = 4X IO ls/cc) in air. Excitation power = I X 10 14 photons/cm' (photogenerated carriers = I X 10 19 /cc). The surface acoustic wave response has been subtracted out. J. Chern. Phys., Vol. 90, No.2, 15 January 1989 Downloaded 22 Apr 2011 to 171.66.54.152. Redistribution subject to AIP license or copyright; see http://jcp.aip.org/about/rights_and_permissions Kasinski et a/.: Surface electron transfer processes known manner due to hydroxide exchange with TiO z at the surface to produce a chemisorbed hydroxide layer (OHs- ).28 Surface bound OHs- should form mid gap states 29 which would significantly increase the density of surface state traps and should lead to enhanced surface state trapping. However, to within signal-to-noise limitations, identical results were found in all crystals studied irregardless ofOHs- coverage. The results were highly reproducible from crystal to crystal with only small variations in the grating decays observed (as mentioned before, variations in the 1/e decay time were less than 5% ). Direct comparison of the carrier dynamics of the same crystal before and after surface treatment showed identical dynamics. The lack of a significant effect of surface adsorbed hydroxide demonstrates that the nonexponential population decays observed cannot be attributed to trapping processes due to chemisorbed OHs- . At high pH, SOH should be ;> 104 cm/s while at low pH, SOH should be <103cm/ s. In order for (OHs-) trapping sites to explain the decay at the lowest pH studied, the capture cross section for chemisorbed OHs would have to be a very unrealistically high -2X 1O-!2 cm 2. Therefore, the observed trapping sites must be intrinsic to the semiconductor. The lack of a chemisorption effect also indicates that the observed trapping sites are not at the atomic surface. The above results are in accord with theoretical and experimental studies. Ultrahigh vacuum photoemission studies of Ti0 2 (001) have shown that, on defect free surfaces, there are no intrinsic mid gap states. 30 This result has been rationalized by theoretical calculations of the electronic states of finite two dimensional surfaces constructed in the (001) structure. 3 ! The oxygen and titanium atoms that constitute the atomic surface are found to have energies lying within the valence and conduction bands, respectively. In the context of carrier trapping processes, these localized sites would be isoenergetic with band states and would not be able to trap electron or hole carriers out of their extended band states. The energetics of the surface atoms can be understood by the highly ionic nature of the Ti02 lattice. There is smaller covalent character to the lattice structure than in silicon or III-V semiconductors such as GaAs. Intrinsic midgap surface states are formed in these covalent crystals due to bond rehybridization and associated interactions occurring at the break in lattice structure defined by the surface. 2 In the TiO z crystal structure, the valence band is formed principally by the oxygen 2p orbitals and the conduction band by titanium 3d orbitals with very little mixing. 3 ! There are not significant changes at the surface in electronic structure that would lead to high density, large cross section intrinsic surface states. In contrast to defect free surfaces, it has been determined that the principal midgap states of Ti0 2 are surface defects involving oxygen vacancies at the surface. 30 Such states leave the titanium in a + 3 oxidation state which would represent a hole carrier trapping center. These same defect states are created in the bulk of the crystal during carrier doping. If oxygen vacancies were effective trapping centers, a carrier concentration dependence should have been observed. However, this was not the case. The observed initial nonexponential decay of the carrier population can be explained by a spatially distinct region of 1261 high trapping. The lack of a chemisorbed hydroxide effect and the lack of an effect on oxygen vacancies (doping induced) indicates that this trapping site is not the atomic surface layer but most likely the deformation layer which extends approximately 100 Afrom the surface. 32 This region is caused both by mechanical polishing and by the inhomogeneous nature of the doping process in TiO z that create strain. The trapping centers are believed to be structural defects within the deformation layer which would have been common to all the crystals studied. The surface is more prone to structural defects than the bulk. Fluctuations in local structure would create strain in the lattice and create energy levels outside the band states that would act as trapping centers. More studies will be needed to unambiguously identify the exact nature of trapping centers near the surface of Ti0 2 • This is especially true since the observed dynamics are dominated by the ambipolar diffusion of carriers to the surface region. With faster carrier transport to the surface, a more pronounced surface treatment effect may be observed. The intrinsic surface state trapping rate constants and surface effects can be sorted out using different excitation wavelengths with shorter· optical penetration depths such that the majority of the carriers are generated within the 100 Adeformation profile. However, the most important conclusion to be drawn from the above studies is that the linear trapping processes near the surface limit carrier lie lifetimes to 5 ns. Interfacial electron transfer processes involving hole minority carriers are in competition with these trapping processes. Quantum yield measurements, based on the photoanodic current, have determined that the interfacial charge transfer is greater than 80% efficient for minority carriers optically generated within the depletion region. 25 Thus, an upper limit can be placed on the interfacial electron transfer dynamics. The results shown in Figs. 4 and 5 indicate that the first step in the surface electron transfer process must be subnanosecondo 2. Interfacial electron transfer studies After measuring the carrier dynamics in air under flat band conditions, a liquid junction was constructed with the crystal in place. Results are shown in Fig. 6 for the same doping level (_10!9/cm 3 ) used for the in-air results depicted in Fig. 4. The data is noisier than the in-air studies due to the increased scattered light from the aqueous electrolyte. The results are shown for closed circuit conditions ( -0 V vs SeE) at pH = 13.5. The same results were found for open circuit. The grating decay consists of two distinct decay components. There is an initial fast decay component of 460 ps and a slower component of 4.8 ns. The slow component is comparable to the semiconductor in-air studies. It is due to bulk electron-hole pairs generated outside the space charge region under field free conditions. The slow decay is due to diffusion of these bulk electron-hole pairs into the space charge region where recombination rates with trapping centers or interfacial electron transfer are high. The fast decay component is the most important feature of the signal. This decay is assigned to the depletion of minority carriers generated within the depletion region due to interfacial electron transfer. The magnitude of this fast de- J. Chern. Phys.• Vol. 90. No.2. 15 January 1989 Downloaded 22 Apr 2011 to 171.66.54.152. Redistribution subject to AIP license or copyright; see http://jcp.aip.org/about/rights_and_permissions Kasinski et al.: Surface electron transfer processes 1262 FIG. 6. Transient grating signal from (doping concentration = 8.2X 10 18 eel in 0.32 M NaOH in Hz 0. Semiconductor at 0 V vs seE. Excitation power 6x 10 13 photons/cm z. The initial fast component of 460 ps is due to thermalized band edge electron transfer. The long 4.8 ns component is due to diffusion of carriers generated outside the space charge region into the depletion layer. n-TiO z I+j o .Z .4 .6 .8 LO I.Z 1.4 1.6 1.8 TIME (nsec) cay component is approximately 50%. This component is expected based on Eq. (5) and the fraction of minority carriers generated within the space charge field, i.e., the absorptivity coefficient a::::: 8 X 104 cm - I at 355 nm 32.33 and the space charge region as determined from Mott-Schottky measurements was 500 A. Previous measurements of photoanodic current have found a quantum efficiency of greater than 80% at 299 nm at which virtually all the carriers are generated within the space charge region. 25 Based on the high quantum yield for interfacial hole transfer, the fast component must be almost exclusively due to minority carrier depletion at the surface. Although this rate is ten times faster than the solid state surface recombination processes observed in the in-air studies, it is still much slower than that expected for unthermalized hole tunneling processes or hot carrier affects. A substantial fraction of the hole carriers are optically generated within the space charge region ( - 30% ). Within the hot carrier model, the very small carrier mass leads to resonance tunneling across the interface to a molecular acceptor from within the space charge region. This requires ballistic transport of the carrier across the space charge region. Some inelastic phonon scattering is inevitable; nevertheless, for a very small hole mass, the intrinsic hole mobility prior to thermalization would have to be very large. All the minority carriers generated within the space charge region would undergo rapid transport to the surface on a picosecond to subpicosecond time scale. Interfacial charge transfer on a similar time scale is expected within the hot carrier model. A significant decay component should have been observed that was either pulse width limited with a decrease in signal amplitude or of a few picoseconds. This was not the case. The observed 460 ps decay component demonstrates that unthermalized electron transfer processes are not occurring at this surface, in contrast to previous predictions. The above conclusion assumes that minority carrier thermalization within the expected quantized space charge region is occurring on a time scale faster than 500 ps. To verify this, we have measured the thermalization based on the frequency dependence of coherent surface acoustic generation. The depth of SA W modulation was identical both at flat band and with a junction at 2 GHz frequencies at the lowest excitation conditions possible (3X 1Ols/cm3 photocarriers). This result demonstrates that thermalization in the space charge region is occurring on a time scale faster than 250 ps (1/4 acoustic period). Slower thermalization times than this would have caused a phase shift in the acoustic oscillations. Further, from measurements of the absolute diffraction efficiency, Eq. (5) places a lower limit on m~ of3. This measurement is in good agreement with another estimate for the hole mass based on a theoretical analysis of the band structure correlated to reflectivity data. 32 This measured effective hole mass is much too large to effectively quantize the space charge region. This determination of m~ is on the conservative side as the Drude model typically predicts smaller carrier optical constants than that found experimentally.34 The discrepancy is primarily from the neglect of the semiconductor band structure in calculating the carrier optical properties with the Drude model. The large hole mass measured negates any strong space charge quantization effects. The major conclusion to be drawn is that hot carrier effects are not significant in this system. Electron transfer processes must be occurring from thermalized carriers directly at the surface. This conclusion must take into consideration the excitation conditions of the experiment. From studies of lower doped samples, excitation conditions equivalent to the background carrier level doping show near flat band dynamics, i.e., the grating decays are very similar to the in-air control studies. The excitation conditions necessary for adequate J. Chem. Phys., Vol. 90, No.2, 15 January 1989 Downloaded 22 Apr 2011 to 171.66.54.152. Redistribution subject to AIP license or copyright; see http://jcp.aip.org/about/rights_and_permissions Kasinski et a/.: Surface electron transfer processes signal to noise for the highly doped sample shown in Fig. 6 was on the order of 6X 1018/cm3 (this was higher than the lower doped samples due to the opaque nature of the crystals at high doping). Under these excitation conditions, the bands would significantly unbend as hole minority carriers are driven to the surface. The resulting hole accumulation at the surface would screen the field of the Helmholtz layer. As a result, the electric field responsible for level quantization would be depleted and the level spacing and carrier thermalization perturbed. However, a significant fraction of the carriers would have experienced the full field strength prior to screening. More importantly, the large measured hole mass eliminates any prospect for significant space charge region quantization such that this is not an important effect. The large hole effective mass also eliminates the need to take into consideration space charge quantization on carrier transport to the surface. Classical continuum treatments of the carrier transport to the surface can be used. At present, the intrinsic hole mobility is uncertain. However, from recent optical measurements of the ambipolar diffusion constant, the hole mobility must be at least 1 cm2IV S.8(d) Thus the minority carriers generated within the depletion layer are driven to the surface in less than 40 ps under the influence of the space charge electric field (E field = 2X 105 V/ cm, 500 A space charge width). 26 The hole carrier transport to the surface from within the depletion layer is faster than the observed 460 decay component. Thus, the decay of the minority carrier population within the depletion layer is determined by the slow interfacial electron transfer rate at the surface. The minority carriers become thermalized with the lattice and the carrier acceptor is most likely either chemisorbed hydroxide ions (OHs- ) at Ti + 3 surface lattice sites or the adsorbed layer of hydroxide (OH- (aq» which comprises the Helmholtz layer. 25 Surface state trapping in principle could also be an intermediate process for the interfacial transfer step. However, the defect centers are predominantly within the space charge region and not exclusively at the atomic surface as determined from the in-air control studies. These states would act as efficient trapping and recombination centers inhibiting interfacial electron transfer and are unlikely, on the basis of the large quantum yield for interfacial charge transfer. In addition, the effective surface density of surface defect trapping centers is on the order of 10 12/ cm2 which is two orders of magnitUde smaller than the hydroxide layer. In contrast, hole filling from OH- adlayer can account for the observed dynamics. The highly delocalized nature of the hole vacancy in combination with the high OH- surface coverage (> 10 141cm2) insures that electron tunneling across the interface will be determined by the activation barrier to attain isoenergetic states and not by spatial diffusion of carriers to a reactive acceptor site. The energetic and spatial position of the minority carrier is well defined by the determination that the transfer involves thermalized minority carriers. The transfer dynamics in this case will be dominated by processes occurring at the atomic surface valence band edge. Thus, the spatial and energetic coordinates of the electron transfer process are well defined. The electron transfer rate, involving OH-, can then be estimated from 1263 single site, single energy expressions for electron transfer. These rates are defined b y35.36 k (E - E = vK(r)exp _ v -A. ')2 (15) redox 4kTA.' ' where k is the electron transfer rate constant, v is the frequency of the nuclear reaction coordinate, K(r) is the electron transfer tunneling parameter, E v is the energy of the surface valence band edge, E redox is the redox energy level and A. ' is the solvent reorganization energy. The energetics of the transfer process involving OH- (aq) are depicted in Fig. 7. The exact energy position of the valence band edge was determined by Mott-Schottky measurements of the flat band potential. The measured flat band potential of - 1.1 V vs SCE agrees with previous studies. 23 •28 The redox potential ofthe OH- (aq)/OHo(aq) was taken from the most recent electrochemical data on this reaction 37 and serves as a reference for the energetics of 0 H - ( aq). The solvent reorganization was calculated according to expressions from Marcus and the constants of water to be 1 ± 0.1 eV. 35 The changes in nuclear coordinates in lattice relaxation of the solid state are negligible in comparison to solvent relaxation. The frequency of this nuclear reaction coordinate in the bulk aqueous layer would be determined to a good approximation by the longitudinal dielectric relaxation time. 38 Although the structure of the aqueous interface and its dielectric properties are unknown, the predicted electron transfer rates using the dielectric relaxation frequency of bulk water for v in Eq. (15), vary from ten picoseconds to several hundred picoseconds -1.1 U"". SC[ E 'f;~'~~';' ................. T- (ON-ION") 5.U ....---- .ed.. + 1.0 U "". $C[ A..l.U +1.9 UUI. SC[ 1_ +2.0U UI. $[[ E FIG. 7. Energy level diagram for the n-Ti02 /OH- ,H2 0 system. The semiconductor is on the left, electrolyte on the right. The arrows indicate unthermaIized long range electron tunneling processes ( T T ) and surface band edge thermalized electron transfer ( Tsc ) from the hydroxide ion to the hole site. The minority carrier acceptor distribution is weighted in favor of thermalized charge transfer processes. J. Chem. Phys., Vol. 90, No.2, 15 January 1989 Downloaded 22 Apr 2011 to 171.66.54.152. Redistribution subject to AIP license or copyright; see http://jcp.aip.org/about/rights_and_permissions 1264 Kasinski et al.: Surface electron transfer processes within a range of acceptable reorganization energies (0.91.1 eV) and OH- (aq) distances (2-5 .A.) from the surface. These transfer times are in qualitative agreement with the observed dynamics and supports OH- (aq) as the initial hole acceptor. Earlier estimates ofOHs- place the energy of that hole carrier acceptor at 0.6 eV above OH-(aq)25.29,39 which would make electron transfer to that site 1-2 orders of magnitude slower than OH- (aq). However, the exact energetics of the interface are not well enough characterized to enable a distinction between OHs- and OH- (aq). The energy position of OH- (aq) also explains the absence of observable hot carrier effects. The OH- (aq) energetics overlap almost exactly with the surface valence band edge which is ideal for thermalized band edge processes. The density ofOH- (aq) ions isoenergetic with hot carrier states is small. The more ideal case for the OH- (aq) energetics with regard to unthermalized electron tunneling processes would be with the OH- (aq) energy level centered supraband edge, i.e., at energies below the surface valence band edge by -0.5 eV. Both the energetics of the OH- (aq) energy level distribution and the large hole mass are factors operating against unthermalized, electron tunneling processes at this surface. B. Optically generated surface acoustic wave studies of the TI0 2 surface The small oscillations seen in the free carrier grating studies discussed above are due to the optical excitation of surface acoustics. The evidence for this assertion will be given below. To increase the SAW amplitude modulation above the carrier grating dynamics, the excitation power was increased to optically generate 1020 carriers/cm3. Under these excitation conditions, higher order electron-hole recombination processes begin to dominate the carrier dynamics. These results are shown in Fig. 8. In this particular study, the pulse compressor was not used and the excitation pulse durations were 140 ps. The initial decay in the grating is nearly pulse width limited. The onset of the faster recombination is quite dramatic, occurring over a factor of 5 in carrier concentration, from 2 X 10 19/cm 3 to 1 X 1020 electronhole pairs/cm 3. The observed power dependence indicates that these faster recombination processes are due to higher order recombination. A comparison of the results in Fig. 4 with these results illustrates that the SA W amplitude has increased significantly as indicated by the increased depth of signal modulation. In going from carrier excitation levels of 3 X 10 1S/cm 3 to 1 X 102°/cm3, the SAW amplitude increases by an order of magnitude. The increase in the SAW amplitude demonstrates that more energy is being deposited into the lattice per optically generated carrier with the onset of the faster recombination processes. This increase in the nonradiative rate is proof that Auger recombination processes begin dominating the carrier recombination at these higher carrier concentration levels. 24 From the spatial geometry of the acoustic excitation mechanism, the acoustic wavelength must match the optical interference pattern. In addition, the theoretical work in Sec. II has shown that the diffracted probe signal should show an (AI - A2 cos CtJt) oscillatory dependence. This predicted dependence reflects the standing wave character of the optically generated SAWs. This effect is observed in Fig. 8 and the beat pattern agrees with the theoretical predictions. This result would have been expected from previous studies of optically generated bulk acoustics. 20 From the acoustic beat frequency (vacoustic)' the velocity can be readily measured ( cs = A Vacoustic ). In this manner, the speed of sound is found to be 4.84 ± 0.01 X 105 cm/s. This speed of sound measurement is in excellent agreement with the known surface acoustic velocity of 4.807X 105cm/s based on SAW excitation using conventional means. 40 Since all other acoustic modes of Ti0 2 have substantially higher velocities,41 the optically excited acoustic mode can only be attributed to a surface acoustic wave. Thus, this result demonstrates that surface restricted transient gratings can be used to selectively excite coherent surface acoustic waves. Previous studies using optical excitation of surface acoustics did not establish coherence in the SAW excitation. 17.42 Coherence in this case is defined as the collective excitation of the material displacements in phase. The results in Fig. 8 show clean sinusoidal oscillations which are indicative of the coherent excitation of a single frequency SAW. The SAW diffraction efficiency at the optical excitation level used was 1 X 10 - 7. From this measurement, the amplitude of the surface displacement can be measured and compared to the theoretical work in Sec. II. However, the SAW light diffraction is superimposed on top of a free carrier phase grating component, as observed by the SA W oscillations occurring on top of a large baseline offset which is slowly decaying nonexponentially (see Fig. 8). A detailed analysis of the light diffraction process needs to incorporate diffraction from both the carrier population grating l5 .16 and the surface acoustics. 43 The total diffraction, with those effects included, is given by 'T/ " = ( -21T)2[dll.N(X,z,t)n eh + ~ Ap + (1 2 00 ll.n(X,z,t)jjdZ) o 2 r 4 ; TIME (NSEc) (n l 0 - n 2 )w; (16) 6 8 FIG. 8. Transient grating excitation of surface acoustics at n-Ti02 surfaces (doping concentration = 4X IOI8/ee ) in air. Excitation power = 2X 10" photons/cm2 (photogenerated carriers = 2 X l(j2o/cc). J. Chem. Phys .• Vol. 90. No.2. 15 January 1989 Downloaded 22 Apr 2011 to 171.66.54.152. Redistribution subject to AIP license or copyright; see http://jcp.aip.org/about/rights_and_permissions Kasinski sf al.: Surface electron transfer processes where n 1 - n2 is the index of refraction difference across the interface, n2 referring to the solid phase index of refraction, i refers to the different surface acoustic modes that propagate along the interface, is the surface displacement of each mode which leads to surface corrugation at the acoustic wavelength, and anjf refers to density modulations in the index of refraction as related through the material photoelastic parameters. In the case ofTi02 in air, there is only one surface acoustic mode to consider. From the symmetry of the (001) surface and the photoelastic tensor for Ti0 2 , only the Pl122 photoelastic effect contributes to the signal. 44,45 The sign of this constant is positive,45 which means the index of refraction decreases with a decrease in density or positive dilation strain. The surface corrugation effect and the photoelastic effect are opposing effects in this case. The photoelastic effect partially cancels the phase modulation of the light off the spatially harmonic surface displacement. However, the surface corrugation effect is larger than the bulk density contributions at £r incidence. 46 In addition, the surface contribution to the diffraction efficiency is further enhanced by the optically induced thermal strain component which is nonpropagating. This thermal strain is induced by the nonradiative relaxation of the optically generated carriers which is highly localized at the surface by the short optical penetration depth ( - 1000 A or A/to) at the optical excitation wavelength. In contrast, the acoustic strain is driven by the initial thermal expansion and radiates away from the surface with the acoustic strain amplitUde decaying exponentially away from the surface with a 1/e decay profile of approximately one acoustic wavelength. Thus, the acoustic strain does not spatially coincide with the thermally induced strain. This additional contribution by the surface thermal strain layer further determines that the diffraction efficiency is dominated by surface corrugation. The initial surface displacement, which is spatially coincident with the peaks in the optical interference pattern, is calculated to lead to negative z displacements, i.e., a bump on the surface. The effective optical pathlength is, therefore, increased in transmission in spatial regions corresponding to peaks in the optical interference pattern. In contrast, the Drude model for the optical properties of electron-hole carriers used to derive Eq. (5) predicts that the index of refraction should decrease, thereby decreasing the effective optical pathlength in this same region. Therefore, the diffraction of this SAW should appear as a modulation which decreases the free carrier phase grating diffraction. This is observed experimentally (see Fig. 8). The first peak in the SAW diffraction appears at one half an acoustic cycle from t = 0 and clearly shows up as a decrease in the signal. This comparison of the SAW light diffraction, which has a known phase, uniquely determines the sign of the free carrier phase grating. This result demonstrates that the Drude model for the free carriers predicts the correct sign for the free carrier optical properties, even though the magnitUde of the change in absorption and dispersion is probably not correct due to the neglect of the semiconductor band structure in this model. From the depth of the SAW modulation of the carrier phase grating, the surface displacement w' is found to be w; 1265 0.5 ± 0.2 A. This determination takes into account the carrier phase grating cross term in Eq. (16). The large error bar in this measurement results from the uncertainty in the photoelastic constants of Ti0 2 • The measured surface displacement is in excellent agreement with the theoretically calculated value of 0.4 ± 0.2 A for the experimental conditions employed. In this case, the error bar is a consequence of using an isotropic approximation. Since the SAW propagation is planar, the principle uncertainty is in the thermal expansion coefficient. This agreement is as close as could be expected given the large uncertainty in the photoelastic contribution to diffraction. This good agreement demonstrates that the theory developed in Sec. II is quantitatively correct and can be used to calculate accurately photoinduced surface strain and SAW propagation. These same optical SAW studies were conducted in the presence of an aqueous interface. The results are shown in Fig. 9. The results are significantly different than the above studies conducted in air. The solid-air surface represents a free half space to SAW propagation; whereas the SAW studies in the presence of the liquid interface involve nontraction free propagation. At the interface between two elastic media, there are only certain material combinations for which interfacial modes, called Stonely waves, exist. These conditions involve large impedance mismatches in the shear velocity components at the interface. 47 This condition is met at liquid interfaces as there is virtually no shear component to acoustic propagation in liquids. In the presence of solid-liquid interfaces, there is expected to be two interfacial modes which co-propagate. The high frequency mode localized in the solid half space is referred to as the generalized Rayleigh mode and propagates with a velocity approximately equal to the SAW mode of the traction free solid but decays slowly as energy leaks off into the liquid. The second mode, referred to as the Stonely mode, is an interfacial wave with its energy highly localized in the liquid phase which propagates 1%- N T E N 5 I T Y o 2 4 6 TIME (nsGlc) 8 10 FIG. 9. Transient grating excitation of interfacial acoustics at the n-Ti02 /H20 interface. n-Ti02 (doping concentration = 4X 1018/cm 3) in 1 M Na2 SO. and 0.054 M NaOH in H 2 0. Semiconductor is at - 0.19 V vs SeE and the excitation power = 2X 1015 photons/cm2 (photogenerated carriers = 2 X 1020/ cm 3 ). There are three acoustic components in the data. The most clearly visible are the high frequency Ti02 Rayleigh wave and the low frequency modulation of the Rayleigh beat signal due to the aqueous interfacial Stonely wave. J. Chern. Phys., Vol. 90, No.2, 15 January 1969 Downloaded 22 Apr 2011 to 171.66.54.152. Redistribution subject to AIP license or copyright; see http://jcp.aip.org/about/rights_and_permissions 1266 Kasinski sf al.: Surface electron transfer processes 2% slower than the bulk longitudinal modes in the liquid. 47 Thus, two frequency components are expected. All these results are observed experimentally. There are negative signal oscillations corresponding to the SA W mode observed in the air studies with the same velocity observed. The amplitUde of this wave is attenuated by the liquid layer (decay time of -4-5 ns) whereas in the absence of the aqueous interface it was relatively unattenuated. Similarly, there is a slower velocity component of 1.471 X 105 cm/s which is 1.3% slower than the bulk speed of sound in water which corresponds to the Stonely aqueous interfacial mode. However, rather than just two acoustic modes, Fourier transform analysis of the data as well as time domain inspection has revealed a third velocity component. This feature of the signal is better illustrated in Fig. 10 where the interfacial aqueous wave component of the signal has been subtracted from the data. Here the third component is clearly visible as a positive shoulder on the Ti0 2 SAW wave (indicated in the figure by arrows). This result shows that the third component induces a phase grating of the opposite sign relative to the Ti0 2 SAW component. The sign of the phase grating developed from this anomolous interfacial mode is the same as that observed for the aqueous interfacial acoustic mode. This 180· change in the phase grating on the aqueous side of the interface is expected due to the 180· phase difference in the way the liquid acoustic modes modulate the surface corrugation. The fact that light diffraction from this anomolous acoustic mode is 180· phase shifted from the Ti0 2 solid SAW mode demonstrates that this mode is localized within the water half space of the interface. In addition, this mode attenuates much faster than any other surface mode which further demonstrates that it is an independent surface mode. It is a true surface acoustic mode uncoupled from the solid Rayleigh or liquid interfacial modes. The interesting feature of this acoustic mode is that its speed of sound is 4.4 ± 0.2 X 105 cm/s. This velocity is much too fast to be explained by the bulk phase of water. This fast water velocity component corresponds more closely to a solid wave speed which indicates that the water layer has undergone a phase structure change at the highly ionic Ti0 2 interface. This point will be discussed further below. There are two possible excitation mechanisms for the aqueous interfacial modes. Either these modes are excited by the propagation of the solid state SAW itself or by thermal energy transfer across the interface. In the solid SAW excitation mechanism of the aqueous modes, the first maxima in the material strain would be phase shifted from its normal position at one half an acoustic cycle from t = 0 (which is the signature of a thermal excitation mechanism). This is not observed, although the exact position of the first maxima of the high velocity water mode is very imprecise and this statement cannot be applied to this mode with certainty. Moreover, each oscillation in the surface due to the solid SAW propagation would excite the interfacial aqueous modes out of phase due to the much higher acoustic frequency of this mode relative to the aqueous modes. This effect would not lead to coherent excitation and would cause cancellation of the standing wave acoustic beats. This is also not observed. Therefore, the excitation mechanism must involve thermal energy transfer across the interface. These modes are amplified in their diffractive power by the presence of the carrier phase grating. The quadratic cross terms of the liquid N T E I N N s T E N T y S I T 0 2 4 6 8 TIME(nsec) 10 CA) Y FIG. 10. Surface acoustic studies of n-Ti02 (doping concentration = 4X 10 '"Icc). Excitation power = 2x 10'5 photons/cm2 (photogenerated carriers = 2X IO'°/cc). (A) In air. (B) In I M Na2SO. and 0.054 M NaOH in H 20. Semiconductor at - 0.19V vs SeE. Longest period acoustic component has been subtracted. The conditions are the same as Figs. 8 and 9 for (A) in air and (B) in I M Na, SO. and 0.054 M NaOH in H 20, respectively. The Stonely aqueous acoustic component is subtracted from the data in (B). The high frequency H2 wave in curve (B) appears as positive shoulders on the Ti02 Rayleigh mode, i.e., 180· out of phase (indicated by arrows). This is better observed in the inset where the two curves are directly overlapped. The bottom curve in the inset is Ti02 in air. ° (8) 2 4 6 TIMECnsec) 8 10 J. Chern. Phys., Vol. 90, No.2, 15 January 1989 Downloaded 22 Apr 2011 to 171.66.54.152. Redistribution subject to AIP license or copyright; see http://jcp.aip.org/about/rights_and_permissions Kasinski et al.: Surface electron transfer processes SAWs with the carrier phase grating in Eq. (16) act to amplify the surface acoustic diffraction in a manner very similar to optical heterodyne detection with a reference optical signal. 48 It is for this reason that these liquid interfacial modes are even observable. Further studies of the TiOz surface in the presence of other liquids were also conducted. Figure 11 shows a comparison between SAW generation at an aqueous interface and ethanol liquid interface. The ethanol interface shows the two expected interfacial modes involving preferential propagation in the solid and liquid bound half spaces. The slow velocity of the liquid interfacial mode agrees with the expected interfacial Stonely mode. Two important points result from the study of the ethanol interface. First, the high speed liquid interfacial mode is not observed at the ethanol interface. Second, the depth of modulation due to the Stonely interfacial ethanol mode is nearly identical with that of the aqueous interface. The first point illustrates that the high velocity liquid mode is unique to the structure of the aqueous interface and not an acoustic sideband between the two normal interfacial acoustic modes. Nonlinear harmonics can also be ruled out from this study as nonlinear harmonics would diffract light into the second order or higher and not into the first order of diffraction that was monitored. 43 The fact that the depth of signal modulation due to the liquid ethanol interfacial mode did not significantly increase demonstrates the diffraction process is dominated by surface corrugation effects. If photoelastic contributions were significant, a pronounced increase in signal should have been observed since the photothermal effect in ethanol is five times larger than in water. 49 The photoelastic effect in Eq. (16), integrated over the acoustic 1/e energy profile of the stationary state wave, is comparable to surface corrugation effects on diffraction. The absence of a significant photoelastic component to diffraction means that the energy localization of the interfacial liquid acoustic mode is much shorter range under these transient observation conditions than that calculated based on analytical solutions to steady state prop- N T E N S I T Y CA) (8) o 2 4 TIME 6 8 10 (nsec) FIG. 11. Surface acoustic studies at n-Ti02 interfaces. Conditions same as Fig. 9 except (A) represents a neat ethanol interface. Curve (B) is for nTiO,in 1 M NazSO. and 0.054 M NaOH in H 2 0 (Fig. 9). The high frequency component observed in the water layer is not seen at the ethanol interface. 1267 agation. Interference effects that would normally localize the energy within one acoustic wavelength under stationary conditions, would not have been established in just I! to 2 acoustic cycles which is the observation time of this interfacialliquid mode. In addition, impulsive material propagation radially away from the surface, following the surface harmonic temperature jump, would lead to a multitude of regions of constructive and destructive interference that would cancel photoelastic effects on this short time scale. The necessarily very short range localization of the acoustic energy at the surface with regard to effects on light diffraction further highlight the importance of the carrier phase grating in amplifying the diffraction. The most important point in all the studies of SAW propagation at interfaces is the unprecedented observation of a high velocity component traveling in the liquid half space. This result implies that there has been significant restructuring of water at the interface. In fact, the observed speed of sound is very close to the speed of sound in ice at o·C (within 10%).50 The correlation of the wave speed with a solid or glass phase indicates that the highly ionic Ti02 surface has strongly perturbed the water layer. The static potential of the surface undoubtedly preferentially orients the water molecules and removes slip-plane translational degrees of freedom which are essential to liquid phase structure. This perturbation would extend several atomic layers from the surface. This restructured water layer would represent a bounded thin elastic layer. A full theoretical treatment of acoustic propagation in such a structure needs to be worked out. It has already been shown analytically that acoustic propagation in thin elastic layers on a solid half space are dominated by mode propagation in the solid state. 51 If the layer is much thinner than an acoustic wavelength, the thin elastic layer has no effect on the surface acoustics. However, these analytical solutions require a stationary state solution to interfacial wave propagation. The excitation of the acoustic mode in a restructured water layer in the above experiment is by impulsive thermal energy transfer from the Ti0 2 surface into the tightly bound aqueous layer. The fact that this mode is not a stationary solution to the interfacial wave problem means that any transient mode propagation would be very heavily damped, which is exactly what is observed. The high velocity water mode only lives for q acoustic cycles. The length scale of the restructured aqueous layer is an important factor. There has been some theoretical work on similar problems which have treated the density modulations at homogeneous solid-liquid interfaces at phase transition critical points. 52 More relevant is the work by Rossky and co-workers on the structure of water at heterogeneous solid-aqueous interfaces where the density perturbation is found to extend a few atomic layers. 53 The depth profile of the restructured water layer can be estimated from the experiment by comparing the amplitUde of the more classical aqueous interfacial mode to the anomolous high velocity component. The static thermal strain of the former mode is localized by slow thermal diffusion to less than 300 A from the surface within one-half acoustic cycle. Based on the observed relative diffraction efficiency of the two modes, the J. Chem. Phys., Vol. 90, No.2, 15 January 1989 Downloaded 22 Apr 2011 to 171.66.54.152. Redistribution subject to AIP license or copyright; see http://jcp.aip.org/about/rights_and_permissions Kasinski et at: Surface electron transfer processes 1268 restructured water layer would have to be - 30 A thick (7lO monolayers) to account for the data. This length scale is in approximate agreement with theoretical estimates of the surface effect on liquid density. The layer may be more extensively restructured in the presence of the n- Ti02/H2 interface than expected, not only due to the highly ionic nature of Ti0 2, but also to the formation of the liquid junction at the interface. Very intense electric fields are associated with the formation of a double layer of charge at this interface. Within the solid half space, the space charge fields which develop upon junction formation are on the order of lO5_lO6 V/cm over a space charge width of a few hundred Angstroms. An opposite field develops in the accumulation of hydroxide ions within the aqueous interface. 36 The width of the counter-ion accumulation in the water layer is an order of magnitude smaller. This very high electric field and the accumulation of hydroxide ions ( > lOl4/cm2 at the surface boundary) would have a significant affect on the liquid structure of the interface which would extend the perturbation of the surface. In addition, the formation of a gel layer at the Ti0 2/H 2 interface at high hydroxide coverage has been postulated from other experiments. 54 Further theoretical work on transient acoustic mode propagation along thin bounded layers will be needed to fully characterize the high velocity interfacial water mode. However, the wave speed demonstrates that the water layer is strongly interacting with the surface. This strong interaction and restructuring of the water layer would have a pronounced effect on the dielectric relaxation at the interface which in tum would affect the dynamics for interfacial electron transfer. The effect would become most pronounced in cases where the electron transfer step involves surface band edge levels centered at the maximum in the electronic energy bandwidth of the molecular acceptor, as in the present case. In this case, the electron transfer step could be rate limited by dielectric relaxation processes. 55 Liquid restructuring effects and slower dielectric relaxation at interfaces would also limit the possibility oftaking advantage of hot carrier interfacial transfer processes in surface chemistry. Water restructuring effects would also dramatically affect molecular diffusion parallel to the surface. Both dielectric relaxation and constraints on molecular diffusion are important considerations in understanding chemical processes at solid-liquid interfaces. ° ° ° ACKNOWLEDGMENTS v. CONCLUDING REMARKS The surface restricted grating method has been demonstrated as a multifaceted probe of both reaction dynamics and phase structure at single crystal surfaces. The high temporal resolution enables detailed studies of surface processes in situ at working single crystal surfaces. For highly doped Ti0 2 crystals, the main competing pathway for charge carriers at the surface are linear recombination processes involving crystal defect centers within the surface strain layer. Auger recombination processes are not effective in carrier recombination until photocarrier levels in excess of5 X lO19/ cm 3. The in situ investigation of minority carrier depletion within the n-Ti0 2/H2 liquid junction space charge region ° demonstrates that interfacial charge transfer involves predominantly thermalized hole vacancies within kT of the atomic surface valence band edge. This is the main conclusion to be drawn from this study. This conclusion is further supported by SAW measurements of carrier thermalization and the grating measurement of the effective hole mass, mt;,3, which rule out unthermalized charge transfer processes at Ti0 2 interfaces. The OH-;- (aq) adlayer is believed to be the initial acceptor based on the observed dynamics of 460 ps for the minority carrier depletion and estimates of the surface energetics. The exact energetics of the interface will be needed to completely distinguish between chemisorbed OHs- and OH-(aq) in the outer Helmholtz plane as the predominant hole acceptor. A detailed theoretical treatment of the three dimensional aspects of the problem incorporating both minority carrier transport and interfacial transfer also needs to be addressed to make a definitive assignment of the initial hole carrier acceptor based on dynamics. In addition to the study of carrier dynamics, the grating can be used to selectively excite surface acoustic modes. Our theoretical treatment of the photothermal coupling to the surface modes predicts very closely the observed surface displacements. Use of the SAW grating as a reference has enabled a determination of the free carrier optical properties which agrees with the Drude model. In the presence of the aqueous interface, optically generated SAWs provided new information about the collective atomic structure of the interface. A transient high velocity component in the water half-space gives evidence for a liquid/solid phase transition at the highly polar Ti0 2 surface i.e., a rigid layer of H2 at the Ti0 2 interface. Due to the inhomogeneous nature of the surface, this solid water layer would also have to be highly inhomogeneous. The high information content of optically written surface gratings provide a new approach to the study of surface reaction processes. This work can be extended to other surfaces to provide a detailed experimental analysis of both surface mediated electron transfer dynamics, the role of surface states in the process, and interfacial phase structure. All these factors are important to understanding surface chemistry and the electron transfer mechanism in general but also have particular importance in controlling the surface chemistry that limits the applications of semiconductor interfaces. This work was supported by the Department of Energy, Office of Basic Sciences (81-049) and the National Science Foundation (S.M.G.). R.J.D.M. is a: recipient of a NSF Presidential Young Investigator Award and an A. P. Sloan Research Fellowship. '(a) R. F. LoringandS. Mukamel,J. Chern. 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