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1.
Phys Chem Chem Phys ; 25(3): 1863-1880, 2023 Jan 18.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36541224

RESUMEN

The relaxation dynamics of electronically excited 3He and 4He clusters and droplets is investigated using time-correlated near-infrared and visible (NIR/VIS) fluorescence excitation spectroscopy. A rich data set spanning a wide range of cluster and droplet sizes is produced. The spectral features broadly follow the vacuum ultraviolet excitation (VUV) spectra. However, when the NIR/VIS spectra are normalised to the VUV fluorescence, regions with distinctly different cluster size and isotope dependence are identified, enabling deeper insight into the relaxation mechanism. Particle density, location of atomic-like states and their principal quantum number, n, are found to play an important role in the relaxation. For states with n = 3 and higher, only energy within the surface region is transferred to excited atoms which are subsequently ejected from the surface and fluoresce in vacuum. For states with n = 2, energy from the entire region within clusters and droplets is transferred to the surface, leading to the ejection of excited atoms and excimers. Here, the energy is transferred by excitation hopping, which competes with radiative and non-radiative decay, making ejection and NIR/VIS fluorescence inefficient in increasingly larger droplets.

2.
J Phys Chem A ; 115(25): 7316-26, 2011 Jun 30.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21466205

RESUMEN

We report a comprehensive investigation of the electronically excited states of helium clusters and droplets of sizes ranging from a few to several 10(7) atoms using time-resolved fluorescence excitation spectroscopy and quantum chemical ab initio calculations. We employ various approaches for our analysis considering the lifetime-dependence of the fluorescence intensity, spectral shifts, intensity scaling with cluster size, isotopic dependence, and density-dependence of the calculated electron wave function radii. A unique feature of helium clusters and droplets is their radially varying particle density. Our results show that short-lived fluorescence is sensitive to regions of increased density and probes excitations located in the bulk volume, whereas long-lived fluorescence is sensitive to regions of reduced density such as for small clusters or for the surface of large droplets. Spectra of (3)He droplets serve as a reference for low density, but are free from contributions of small clusters. This allows us to distinguish regions of reduced density as these can be due to both surface states or small clusters. Our analysis reveals a picture where spectral features are related to regions of different density due to isotopic composition, cluster size, and surface or bulk volume location of the excitations. The 2s and 2p related excitations appear as blue-shifted wings for small clusters or for excited atoms within the surface layer, whereas in the bulk-volume of large droplets, they appear as distinct bands with large intensities, dominating the entire spectrum. Excitations at energies higher than 23 eV are unambiguously assigned to regions of low and medium density location within the deeper parts of the surface layer but show no relation to the bulk volume. Our findings support the idea that in liquid helium high-lying states and, in particular, Rydberg states are quenched in favor of the 2s and 2p excitations.

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