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Probing electron correlation in ethylene molecule by direct photo double ionization

ORAL

Abstract

Direct photo double ionization (PDI) of an atom or molecule by a single photon is an ideal testbed for investigating electron-electron correlation. Previous experimental investigations on simple hydrogen molecules over 20 years ago demonstrated that highly differential cross sections such as the relative electron emission angle in the body fixed frame with respect to the polarization vector can be measured and reproduced by ab initio calculations. Applying this approach to a polyatomic molecule provides the opportunity to better understand the interplay between electronic correlations within the molecule. Here, we investigated the PDI of single ethylene molecules near the double ionization threshold, in order to unravel the fundamental physics of electron correlation in inter-shell and intra-shell dielectron emissions and the subsequent molecular dynamics.

We used XUV photons (40.5 eV) from the Advanced Light Source and employed COLd Target Recoil Ion Momentum Spectroscopy (COLTRIMS) in order to detect the two ejected electrons and related photo-fragments in coincidence for three different dissociation channels: symmetric breakup, deprotonation, and hydrogen elimination. In this presentation, electron-ion and electron-electron energy correlation maps, along with molecular frame photoelectron angular distributions for the three different fragmentation channels and select electron energy-sharing scenarios, will be presented and compared.

Presenters

  • Moniruzzaman Shaikh

    Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory

Authors

  • Moniruzzaman Shaikh

    Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory

  • Wael Iskander

    Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory

  • Sun Y Lee

    Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory

  • Daniel S Slaughter

    Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, Chemical Sciences Division, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, Berkeley, CA 94720 USA

  • Thorsten Weber

    Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory