Issue 32, 2022

Stereodynamics effects in grazing-incidence fast-molecule diffraction

Abstract

Grazing-incidence fast-projectile diffraction has been proposed both as a complement and an alternative to thermal-energy projectile scattering, which explains the interest that this technique has received in recent years, especially in the case of atomic projectiles. On the other hand, despite the richer physics involved, molecular projectiles have received much less attention. In this work, we present a theoretical study of grazing-incidence fast-molecule diffraction of H2 from KCl(001) using a six-dimensional density functional theory based potential energy surface and a time-dependent wavepacket propagation method. The analysis of the computed diffraction patterns as a function of the molecular alignment, and their comparison with the available experimental data, where the initial distribution of rotational states in the molecule is not known, reveals a puzzling stereodynamics effect of the diffracted projectiles: diffracted molecules aligned perpendicular, or quasi perpendicular, to the surface reproduce rather well the experimental diffraction pattern, whereas those molecules aligned parallel to or tilted with respect to the surface do not behave as in the experiments. These results call for more detailed investigations of the molecular beam generation process.

Graphical abstract: Stereodynamics effects in grazing-incidence fast-molecule diffraction

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
09 may. 2022
Accepted
27 jul. 2022
First published
03 ago. 2022

Phys. Chem. Chem. Phys., 2022,24, 19541-19551

Stereodynamics effects in grazing-incidence fast-molecule diffraction

M. del Cueto, A. S. Muzas, F. Martín and C. Díaz, Phys. Chem. Chem. Phys., 2022, 24, 19541 DOI: 10.1039/D2CP02109A

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