Imaging Isotopic Effects in the Enhanced Ionization of Water
ORAL
Abstract
A strong enhancement can be achieved in the sequential multiple ionization of water by stretching and unbending the molecule. Selectively ionizing two electrons can induce these geometrical distortions and facilitate the ionization of a third electron. Studying this effect in D2O, one of the heavier isotopologues of water, we uncovered a critical geometry at which this enhancement is maximal. Here the molecule was entirely unbent and the OD bond lengths were approximately doubled in length (rOD ~ 2.2 Å). However, the sequential multiple ionization process in water should differ for its other isotopologues, e.g. H2O and HOD. The width of the nuclear wave packets involved, the speed at which they move, and the paths they take will all differ. By performing a comparative analysis of all three isotopologues and utilizing both experimental data and ab initio theory, we seek to identify how the enhanced ionization effect differs, and identify the key contributing factors. For each isotopologue, we initiate sequential multiple ionization by using 6-fs 800-nm pulse pairs with variable interpulse delay. The first pulse forms the dication; the second pulse forms the trication, and nuclear rearrangement occurs in the time between the two. After formation of the trication, the molecule undergoes a Coulomb explosion and the 3D momentum of each fragment is measured in coincidence and used to reconstruct the molecule’s internuclear geometry.
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Publication: "Filming Enhanced Ionization in an Ultrafast Triatomic Slingshot", submitted to Communications Chemistry.<br>https://doi.org/10.48550/arXiv.2210.13645
Presenters
Andrew J Howard
Stanford University
Authors
Andrew J Howard
Stanford University
Mathew Britton
Stanford University, SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory
Zachary L Streeter
Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory
Chuan Cheng
State Univ of NY - Stony Brook, Stony Brook University
Ruaridh Forbes
SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory, LCLS, SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory, Menlo Park, CA, USA
Joshua L Reynolds
Stanford University
Felix Allum
Stanford University, Stanford PULSE Institute, Stanford PULSE Institute, Menlo Park, CA, USA
Ian Gabalski
Stanford Univ, Stanford University
Robert R Lucchese
Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, LBL, Chemical Sciences Division, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, Berkeley, CA 94720 USA
William McCurdy
University of California, Davis, U. C. Davis and Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory
Thomas Weinacht
Department of Physics and Astronomy, Stony Brook University, Stony Brook, New York, USA, Stony Brook University