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Electron attachment and electron ionization of acetic acid clusters embedded in helium nanodroplets

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journal contribution
posted on 2014-01-24, 11:03 authored by F. F. da Silva, S. Jaksch, G. Martins, H. M. Dang, M. Dampc, S. Denifl, T. D. Maerk, P. Limao-Vieira, J. Liu, Shengfu Yang, Andrew M. Ellis, P. Scheier
The effect of incident electrons on acetic acid clusters is explored for the first time. The acetic acid clusters are formed inside liquid helium nanodroplets and both cationic and anionic products ejected into the gas phase are detected by mass spectrometry. The cation chemistry (induced by electron ionization at 100 eV) is dominated by production of protonated acetic acid (Ac) clusters, Ac[subscript n]H[superscript +], although some fragmentation is also observed. In the case of anion production (at 2.8 eV electron energy) there is a clear distinction between the monomer and the clusters. For the monomer the dominant product is the dehydrogenated species, [Ac–H][superscript −], whereas for the clusters both the parent anion, Ac[subscript n][superscript −], and the dehydrogenated species, [Ac[subscript n]–H][superscript −], have similar abundances. A particularly intriguing contrast between the monomer and cluster anions is that helium atoms are seen attached to the latter whereas no evidence of helium atom attachment is found for the monomer. This surprising observation is attributed to the formation of acyclic (head-to-tail) acetic acid clusters in helium nanodroplets, which have more favourable electronic properties for binding helium atoms. The acyclic clusters represent a local minimum on the potential energy surface and in the case of the dimer this is distinct from the cyclic isomer (the global minimum) identified in gas phase experiments.

History

Citation

Physical Chemistry Chemical Physics, 2009, 11 (48), pp. 11631-11637

Author affiliation

/Organisation/COLLEGE OF SCIENCE AND ENGINEERING/Department of Chemistry

Version

  • VoR (Version of Record)

Published in

Physical Chemistry Chemical Physics

Publisher

Royal Society of Chemistry

issn

1463-9076

eissn

1463-9084

Copyright date

2009

Available date

2014-01-24

Publisher version

http://pubs.rsc.org/en/Content/ArticleLanding/2009/CP/b918210a#!divAbstract

Language

en