Interplay of protection and damage through intermolecular processes in the decay of electronic core holes in microsolvated organic molecules

Abstract

Soft X-ray irradiation of molecules causes electronic core-level vacancies through photoelectron emission. In light elements, such as C, N, or O, which are abundant in the biosphere, these vacancies predominantly decay by Auger emission, leading inevitably to dissociative multiply charged states. It was recently demonstrated that an environment can prevent fragmentation of core-level-ionised small organic molecules through immediate non-local decay of the core hole, dissipating charge and energy to the environment. Here, we present an extended photoelectron–photoion–photoion coincidence (PEPIPICO) study of the biorelevant pyrimidine molecule embedded in a water cluster. It is observed and supported by theoretical calculations that the supposed protective effect of the environment is partially reversed if the vacancy is originally located at a water molecule. In this scenario, intermolecular energy or charge transfer from the core-ionised water environment to the pyrimidine molecule leads to ionisation of the latter, however, presumably in non-dissociative cationic states. Our results contribute to a more comprehensive understanding of the complex interplay of protective and harmful effects of an environment in the photochemistry of microsolvated molecules exposed to X-rays.

Graphical abstract: Interplay of protection and damage through intermolecular processes in the decay of electronic core holes in microsolvated organic molecules

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
11 Nhl 2024
Accepted
24 Yan 2025
First published
06 Kul 2025
This article is Open Access
Creative Commons BY license

Phys. Chem. Chem. Phys., 2025, Advance Article

Interplay of protection and damage through intermolecular processes in the decay of electronic core holes in microsolvated organic molecules

D. Bloß, N. V. Kryzhevoi, J. Maurmann, P. Schmidt, A. Knie, J. H. Viehmann, C. Küstner-Wetekam, S. Deinert, G. Hartmann, F. Trinter, L. S. Cederbaum, A. Ehresmann, A. I. Kuleff and A. Hans, Phys. Chem. Chem. Phys., 2025, Advance Article , DOI: 10.1039/D4CP03907F

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