A novel high pressure reaction cell and sample transfer mechanism for ultrahigh vacuum (UHV) spectroscopic chambers is described. The design employs a unique modification of a commercial load-lock transfer system to emulate a tractable microreactor. The reaction cell has an operating pressure range of \u3c 1 × 10-4 to 1000 Torr and can be evacuated to UHV conditions to enable sample transfer into the spectroscopic chamber. Additionally, a newly designed sample holder equipped with electrical and thermocouple contacts is described. The sample holder is capable of resistive specimen heating to 400 and 800 °C with current requirements of 14 A (2 V) and 25 A (3.5 V), respectively. The design enables thorough material science characterization ...
Traditional surface science experiments are conducted under ultra high vacuum conditions, this enabl...
This is the published version. Copyright 2008 American Institute of PhysicsWe present the design and...
Spectroscopic studies are rarely performed at very high temperature, especially when combined with l...
We have designed a high-pressurereaction cell and sample transfer system as an addition to an existi...
We have designed a high-pressurereaction cell and sample transfer system as an addition to an existi...
We have designed a high-pressurereaction cell and sample transfer system as an addition to an existi...
We have designed a high-pressurereaction cell and sample transfer system as an addition to an existi...
The last 10-15 years has witnessed a resurgence in the application of high pressure X-ray photoelect...
We present the design and performance of a home-built high-pressure and high-temperature reactor equ...
International audienceThis paper describes a versatile, light weight, and portable chamber dedicated...
We describe an experimental setup for studying gas adsorption and chemical surface reactions by scan...
We describe an experimental setup for studying gas adsorption and chemical surface reactions by scan...
We describe an experimental setup for studying gas adsorption and chemical surface reactions by scan...
Traditional surface science experiments are conducted under ultra high vacuum conditions, this enabl...
An ultra-high vacuum (UHV) setup for “real” and “inverse” model catalyst preparation, depth-resolved...
Traditional surface science experiments are conducted under ultra high vacuum conditions, this enabl...
This is the published version. Copyright 2008 American Institute of PhysicsWe present the design and...
Spectroscopic studies are rarely performed at very high temperature, especially when combined with l...
We have designed a high-pressurereaction cell and sample transfer system as an addition to an existi...
We have designed a high-pressurereaction cell and sample transfer system as an addition to an existi...
We have designed a high-pressurereaction cell and sample transfer system as an addition to an existi...
We have designed a high-pressurereaction cell and sample transfer system as an addition to an existi...
The last 10-15 years has witnessed a resurgence in the application of high pressure X-ray photoelect...
We present the design and performance of a home-built high-pressure and high-temperature reactor equ...
International audienceThis paper describes a versatile, light weight, and portable chamber dedicated...
We describe an experimental setup for studying gas adsorption and chemical surface reactions by scan...
We describe an experimental setup for studying gas adsorption and chemical surface reactions by scan...
We describe an experimental setup for studying gas adsorption and chemical surface reactions by scan...
Traditional surface science experiments are conducted under ultra high vacuum conditions, this enabl...
An ultra-high vacuum (UHV) setup for “real” and “inverse” model catalyst preparation, depth-resolved...
Traditional surface science experiments are conducted under ultra high vacuum conditions, this enabl...
This is the published version. Copyright 2008 American Institute of PhysicsWe present the design and...
Spectroscopic studies are rarely performed at very high temperature, especially when combined with l...