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Imaging rotation of a radical co-fragment in UV-induced photodissociation of dihalomethanes

ORAL

Abstract

Numerous studies of the A-band photodissociation of dihalomethanes suggest that more than 80% of the excess photon energy can be deposited into internal degrees of freedom, triggering rotation of the molecular reaction product. We directly map such rotation upon the C-I bond cleavage in CH2BrI and CH2ClI at 264 nm by time-resolved Coulomb explosion imaging. The dissociating molecule is multiply-ionized by the 790-nm probe pulse and breaks up into CH2+ and two halogen ions, detected in coincidence. The rotation of CH2Br or CH2Cl products shows up as an oscillatory structure (period ~270 fs) in the delay-dependent kinetic energies and relative emission angles of the detected ions. Our results agree well with the simulation based on a rigid-rotor model of the radical co-fragment rotation with increasing C-I bond length and suggest that the dissociating molecule periodically approaches a nearly linear geometry, where the fragment located in the middle acquires minimal kinetic energy.

Presenters

  • Farzaneh Ziaee

    Kansas State University

Authors

  • Farzaneh Ziaee

    Kansas State University

  • Enliang Wang

    Kansas State university, Kansas State University

  • Kurtis D Borne

    See bit.ly/3sWHJp4 for a full list of collaborators, J. R. Macdonald Laboratory, Physics Department, Kansas State University, Manhattan, KS, US, Kansas State University

  • Surjendu Bhattacharyya

    J. R. Macdonald Laboratory, Physics Department, Kansas State University, Manhattan, KS, US, J.R. Macdonald Laboratory, Department of Physics, Kansas State University, Manhattan, KS, USA, Kansas State University

  • Nathan Marshall

    Kansas State University

  • Balram Kaderiya

    Kansas State University

  • Daniel Rolles

    Kansas State University, J. R. Macdonald Laboratory, Physics Department, Kansas State University, Manhattan, KS, US

  • Artem Rudenko

    J. R. Macdonald Laboratory, Physics Department, Kansas State University, Manhattan, KS, US, Kansas State University