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1.
J Synchrotron Radiat ; 30(Pt 4): 831-840, 2023 Jul 01.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37159290

RESUMO

FlexPES is a soft X-ray beamline on the 1.5 GeV storage ring at MAX IV Laboratory, Sweden, providing horizontally polarized radiation in the 40-1500 eV photon energy range and specializing in high-resolution photoelectron spectroscopy, fast X-ray absorption spectroscopy and electron-ion/ion-ion coincidence techniques. The beamline is split into two branches currently serving three endstations, with a possibility of adding a fourth station at a free port. The refocusing optics provides two focal points on each branch, and enables either focused or defocused beam on the sample. The endstation EA01 at branch A (Surface and Materials Science) is dedicated to surface- and materials-science experiments on solid samples at ultra-high vacuum. It is well suited not only to all flavours of photoelectron spectroscopy but also to fast (down to sub-minute) high-resolution X-ray absorption measurements with various detectors. Branch B (Low-Density Matter Science) has the possibility to study gas-phase/liquid samples at elevated pressures. The first endstation of this branch, EB01, is a mobile setup for various ion-ion and electron-ion coincidence techniques. It houses a versatile reaction microscope, which can be used for experiments during single-bunch or multi-bunch delivery. The second endstation, EB02, is based on a rotatable chamber with an electron spectrometer for photoelectron spectroscopy studies on primarily volatile targets, and a number of peripheral setups for sample delivery, such as molecular/cluster beams, metal/semiconductor nanoparticle beams and liquid jets. This station can also be used for non-UHV photoemission studies on solid samples. In this paper, the optical layout and the present performance of the beamline and all its endstations are reported.


Assuntos
Elétrons , Síncrotrons , Raios X , Radiografia , Laboratórios
2.
Phys Chem Chem Phys ; 24(47): 28825-28830, 2022 Dec 07.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36420980

RESUMO

Symmetry breaking and competition between electronic decay and nuclear dynamics are major factors determining whether the memory of the initial core-hole localisation in a molecule is retained long enough to affect fragmentation. We investigate the fate of core holes localised at different sites in the free 1,3 trans butadiene molecule by using synchrotron radiation to selectively excite core electrons from different C 1s sites to π* orbitals. Fragmentation involving bonds localised at the site of the core hole provides clear evidence for preferential bond breaking for a core hole located at the terminal carbon site, while the signature of localisation is weak for a vacancy on the central carbon site. The origin of this difference is attributed to out-of-plane vibrations, and statistical evaporation of protons for vacancies located at the central carbon sites.

3.
Phys Chem Chem Phys ; 21(46): 25749-25762, 2019 Nov 27.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31720608

RESUMO

While largely studied on the macroscopic scale, the dynamics leading to nucleation and fission processes in atmospheric aerosols are still poorly understood at the molecular level. Here, we present a joint experimental-theoretical study of a model system consisting of hydrogen-bonded ammonia and water molecules. Experimentally, the clusters were produced via adiabatic co-expansion. Double ionization ionic products were prepared using synchrotron radiation and analyzed with coincidence mass- and 3D momentum spectroscopy. Calculations were carried out using ab initio molecular dynamics to understand the fragmentation within the first ∼500 fs. Further exploration of the potential energy surfaces was performed at a DFT level of theory to gain information on the energetics of the processes. Water was identified as an efficient nano-droplet stabilizer, and is found to have a significant effect even at low water content. On the molecular level, the stabilizing role of water can be related to an increase in the dissociation energy between ammonia molecules and the water enriched environment at the cluster surface. Furthermore, our results support the role of ammonium as a charge carrier in the solution, preferentially bound to surrounding ammonia molecules, which can influence the atmospheric nucleation process.

4.
Phys Chem Chem Phys ; 20(2): 932-940, 2018 Jan 03.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29230456

RESUMO

The charge and proton dynamics in hydrogen-bonded networks are investigated using ammonia as a model system. The fragmentation dynamics of medium-sized clusters (1-2 nm) upon single photon multi-ionization is studied, by analyzing the momenta of small ionic fragments. The observed fragmentation pattern of the doubly- and triply-charged clusters reveals a spatial anisotropy of emission between fragments (back-to-back). Protonated fragments exhibit a distinct kinematic correlation, indicating a delay between ionization and fragmentation (fission). The different kinematics observed for channels containing protonated and unprotonated species provides possible insights into the prime mechanisms of charge and proton transfer, as well as proton hopping, in such a nanoscale system.

5.
Phys Chem Chem Phys ; 17(29): 18944-52, 2015 Jul 15.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26129695

RESUMO

Nuclear motion in the N1s(-1)4a core-excited state of ammonia is investigated by studying the angular anisotropy of fragments produced in the decay of the highly excited molecule and compared with predictions from ab initio calculations. Two different fragmentation channels (H(+)/NH2(+) and H(+)/NH(+)/H) reveal complex nuclear dynamics as the excitation photon energy is tuned through the 4a1 resonance. The well-defined angular anisotropy of the fragments produced in the dissociation of the molecular dication species suggests a very rapid nuclear motion and the time scale of the nuclear dynamics is limited to the low fs timescale.

6.
J Phys Chem B ; 128(28): 6866-6875, 2024 Jul 18.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38976651

RESUMO

Ammonium nitrate in aqueous solution was investigated with synchrotron radiation based photoelectron spectroscopy using two types of liquid jet nozzles. Electron emission from a cylindrical microjet of aqueous ammonium nitrate solution was measured at two different angles relative to the horizontal polarization of the incident synchrotron radiation, 90° and 54.7° (the "magic angle"), for a range of photon energies (470-530 eV). We obtained ß parameter values as a function of photon energy, based on a normalization procedure relying on simulations of background intensity with the SESSA (Simulation of Electron Spectra for Surface Analysis) package. The ß values are similar to literature data for O 1s ionization of liquid water, and the ß value of N 1s from NH4+ is higher than that for NO3-, by ≈0.1. The measurements also show that the photoelectron signal from NO3- exhibits a photon energy dependent cross section variation not observed in NH4+. Additional measurements using a flat jet nozzle found that the ammonium and nitrate peak area ratio was unaffected by changes in the takeoff angle, indicating a similar distribution of both ammonium and nitrate in the surface region.

7.
Commun Chem ; 5(1): 16, 2022 Feb 04.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36697591

RESUMO

CO2-rich planetary atmospheres are continuously exposed to ionising radiation driving major photochemical processes. In the Martian atmosphere, CO2 clusters are predicted to exist at high altitudes motivating a deeper understanding of their photochemistry. In this joint experimental-theoretical study, we investigate the photoreactions of CO2 clusters (≤2 nm) induced by soft X-ray ionisation. We observe dramatically enhanced production of [Formula: see text] from photoionized CO2 clusters compared to the case of the isolated molecule and identify two relevant reactions. Using quantum chemistry calculations and multi-coincidence mass spectrometry, we pinpoint the origin of this enhancement: A size-dependent structural transition of the clusters from a covalently bonded arrangement to a weakly bonded polyhedral geometry that activates an exothermic reaction producing [Formula: see text]. Our results unambiguously demonstrate that the photochemistry of small clusters/particles will likely have a strong influence on the ion balance in atmospheres.

8.
Eur J Mass Spectrom (Chichester) ; 15(2): 283-91, 2009.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19423913

RESUMO

Azimuthal quadrupolar excitation is a commonly used technique in the field of ion cyclotron resonance mass spectrometry, in particular in combination with buffer-gas collisions to achieve axialization of the stored ions. If the quadrupolar excitation is applied with only one phase to a set of two opposing ring segments (rather than the "regular" method where two sets of electrodes are addressed with opposite polarities), parametric resonance effects at the frequencies 2nu(z) and nu(p) = nu(+) - nu(-) can lead to unintended ejection of ions from the trap. These parametric resonances have been revisited both theoretically and experimentally: multipole components of different azimuthal excitation schemes are derived by a simple vector representation of the excitation signal applied to the ring segments. Thus, parametric contributions can be easily identified, as demonstrated for the two-electrode and the four-electrode quadrupolar excitation schemes as well as further examples. In addition, the effect of the single-phase two-electrode quadrupolar excitation is demonstrated for storage and axialization of cluster ions.

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