Photoelectron-photofragment coincidence studies of I3− using an electrospray ionization source and a linear accelerator
Abstract
Photoelectron-photofragment coincidence (PPC) spectroscopy is used to examine the dissociative photodetachment (DPD) of I3−. The high beam energy PPC spectrometer for complex anions couples an electrospray ionization source, a hexapole accumulation ion trap and a linear accelerator to produce fast beams of I3− (M = 381 amu) anions, the heaviest system studied to date. Following photodetachment, the photoelectron and up to three photofragments are recorded in coincidence yielding a kinematically complete picture of the DPD dynamics at beam energies of 11 keV and 21 keV. Photodetachment leads to the production of stable I3, two-body DPD, as well as evidence for two- and three-body photodissociation. DPD is found to occur predominantly via the first excited A state, with some contributions from highly excited vibrational levels in the neutral ground state. With the ions thermalized to 298 K in the hexapole trap, there are significant contributions from vibrational hot bands. Three-body photodissociation at 4.66 eV is found to occur preferentially via a charge-symmetric process to form I + I− + I. In the future this method will be applied to other polyatomic systems with a large molecular mass, including multiply charged anions and complex clusters, in concert with a cryogenically cooled hexapole trap to reduce thermal effects.
- This article is part of the themed collection: Advances in ion spectroscopy - from astrophysics to biology