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Many books are available that detail the basic principles of the
different methods of surface characterization. On the other hand,
the scientific literature provides a resource of how individual
pieces of research are conducted by particular labo- tories.
Between these two extremes the literature is thin but it is here
that the present volume comfortably sits. Both the newcomer and the
more mature scientist will find in these chapters a wealth of
detail as well as advice and general guidance of the principal
phenomena relevant to the study of real samples. In the analysis of
samples, practical analysts have fairly simple models of how
everything works. Superimposed on this ideal world is an
understanding of how the parameters of the measurement method, the
instrumentation, and the char- teristics of the sample distort this
ideal world into something less precise, less controlled, and less
understood. The guidance given in these chapters allows the
scientist to understand how to obtain the most precise and
understood measu- ments that are currently possible and, where
there are inevitable problems, to have clear guidance as the extent
of the problem and its likely behavior.
With the development in the 1960s of ultrahigh vacuum equipment and
techniques and electron, X-ray, and ion beam techniques to
determine the structure and composition of interfaces, activities
in the field of surface science grew nearly exponentially. Today
surface science impacts all major fields of study from physical to
biological sciences, from physics to chemistry, and all engineering
disciplines. The materials and phenomena characterized by surface
science range from se- conductors, where the impact of surface
science has been critical to progress, to metals and ceramics,
where selected contributions have been important, to bio- terials,
where contributions are just beginning to impact the field, to
textiles, where the impact has been marginal. With such a range of
fields and applications, questions about sample selection,
preparation, treatment, and handling are difficult to cover
completely in one review article or one chapter. Therefore, the
editors of this book have assembled a range of experts with
experience in the major fields impacted by surface
characterization. It is the only book which treats the subject of
sample handling, preparation, and treatment for surface
characterization. It is full of tricks, cautions, and handy tips to
make the laboratory scientist's life easier. With respect to
organization of the book, the topics range from discussion of
vacuum to discussion of biological, organic, elemental or compound
samples, to samples prepared ex situ or in situ to the vacuum, to
deposition ofthin films. Generic considerations of sample
preparation are also given.
With the development in the 1960s of ultrahigh vacuum equipment and
techniques and electron, X-ray, and ion beam techniques to
determine the structure and composition of interfaces, activities
in the field of surface science grew nearly exponentially. Today
surface science impacts all major fields of study from physical to
biological sciences, from physics to chemistry, and all engineering
disciplines. The materials and phenomena characterized by surface
science range from se- conductors, where the impact of surface
science has been critical to progress, to metals and ceramics,
where selected contributions have been important, to bio- terials,
where contributions are just beginning to impact the field, to
textiles, where the impact has been marginal. With such a range of
fields and applications, questions about sample selection,
preparation, treatment, and handling are difficult to cover
completely in one review article or one chapter. Therefore, the
editors of this book have assembled a range of experts with
experience in the major fields impacted by surface
characterization. It is the only book which treats the subject of
sample handling, preparation, and treatment for surface
characterization. It is full of tricks, cautions, and handy tips to
make the laboratory scientist's life easier. With respect to
organization of the book, the topics range from discussion of
vacuum to discussion of biological, organic, elemental or compound
samples, to samples prepared ex situ or in situ to the vacuum, to
deposition ofthin films. Generic considerations of sample
preparation are also given.
The observation of the vibrational spectra of adsorbed species
provides one of the most incisive methods for und erst an ding
chemical and physical phenomena on surfaces. At the present time,
many approaches may be applied to studies of molecular vibrations
on surfaces. Some of these are used on high-area solids of
technological importance (e.g., heterogeneous catalysts) while
others are applied to single-crystal substrates to gain better
understanding under conditions of controlled surface structure.
This book has attempted to bring together in one place a discussion
of the major methods used to measure vibrational spectra of surface
species. The emphasis is on basic concepts and experimental methods
rather than a current survey of the extensive literature in this
field. Two introductory chapters describe the basic theoretical
aspects of vibrational spectroscopy on surfaces, dealing with
normal modes and excitation mechanisms in vibrational spectroscopy.
The remaining seven chapters deal with various methods employed to
observe surface vibra tions. These are arranged in an order that
first treats the use of various methods on surfaces that are not of
the single-crystal type. It is in this area that the field first
got started in the late 1940s with pioneering work by Terenin and
others in the Soviet Union, and by Eisehens and others in the
United States in the 1950s. The last four chapters deal with
relatively recent methods that permit vibrational studies to be
made on single crystal substrates."
Many books are available that detail the basic principles of the
different methods of surface characterization. On the other hand,
the scientific literature provides a resource of how individual
pieces of research are conducted by particular labo- tories.
Between these two extremes the literature is thin but it is here
that the present volume comfortably sits. Both the newcomer and the
more mature scientist will find in these chapters a wealth of
detail as well as advice and general guidance of the principal
phenomena relevant to the study of real samples. In the analysis of
samples, practical analysts have fairly simple models of how
everything works. Superimposed on this ideal world is an
understanding of how the parameters of the measurement method, the
instrumentation, and the char- teristics of the sample distort this
ideal world into something less precise, less controlled, and less
understood. The guidance given in these chapters allows the
scientist to understand how to obtain the most precise and
understood measu- ments that are currently possible and, where
there are inevitable problems, to have clear guidance as the extent
of the problem and its likely behavior.
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