scholarly journals Electronic Energy Partitioning in Photodissociation

1983 ◽  
Vol 3 (1-6) ◽  
pp. 57-72
Author(s):  
Sherwin J. Singer ◽  
Karl F. Freed ◽  
Yehuda B. Band

Despite the apparent simplicity of photodissociation in diatomic molecules, some of the essential physics of this process is not understood when there is fine structure in the atomic photofragments. Previous theories cannot treat the branching ratios and angular distributions of the individual fine structure sublevels. We have developed a complete quantum mechanical theory of the effects of nonadiabatic couplings and of electronic angular momentum on the fine structure branching ratios, angular distributions, and polarization in diatomic photodissociation. When the photofragments separate with large relative kinetic energy, simple limiting expressions can be obtained for branching ratios and the symmetry parameters which characterize fragment angular distributions and polarized fluorescence from excited fragments. Information about the symmetry of the molecular states involved in the optical transition which dissociates the molecule may be deduced from fine structure branching ratios and asymmetry parameters in the high energy limit. At low relative kinetic energies where non-adiabatic couplings are crucial, cross sections and asymmetry parameters exhibit interesting behavior which intimately reflect the shape of the dissociative molecular surfaces. We employ the example of sodium hydride photodissociation to produce P2 excited sodium atoms as a model system because of the availability of ab initio potential curves and oscillator strength matrix elements. The low energy photodissociation cross section and angular distributions are shown to exhibit resonances which arise in part due to non-adiabatic spin–orbitand Coriolis couplings. Their energy dependence can therefore be utilized to probe the nature of potential curves which are not directly pumped in optical absorption processes and may therefore provide a unique spectroscopic means for measuring properties of these “dark” states.

1986 ◽  
Vol 51 (4) ◽  
pp. 731-737
Author(s):  
Viliam Klimo ◽  
Jozef Tiňo

Geometry and energy parameters of the individual dissociation intermediate steps of CH4 molecule, parameters of the barrier to linearity and singlet-triplet separation of the CH2 molecule have been calculated by means of the UMP method in the minimum basis set augmented with the bond functions. The results agree well with experimental data except for the geometry of CH2(1A1) and relatively high energy values of CH(2II) and CH2(1A1) where the existence of two UHF solutions indicates a necessity of description of the electronic correlation by more exact methods of quantum chemistry.


The system of bands in the visible region of the emission spectrum of magnesium hydride is now well known. The bands with heads at λλ 5622, 5211, 4845 were first measured by Prof. A. Fowler, who arranged many of the strongest lines in empirical series for identification with absorption lines in the spectra of sun-spots. Later, Heurlinger rearranged these series in the now familiar form of P, Q and R branches, and considered them, with the OH group, as typical of doublet systems in his classification of the fine structure of bands. More recently, W. W. Watson and P. Rudnick have remeasured these bands, using the second order of a 21-foot concave grating, and have carried out a further investigation of the fine structure in the light of the present theory of band spectra. Their detection of an isotope effect of the right order of magnitude, considered with the general structure of the system, and the experimental work on the production of the spectrum, seems conclusive in assigning these bands to the diatomic molecule MgH. The ultra-violet spectrum of magnesium hydride is not so well known. The band at λ 2430 and the series of double lines in the region λ 2940 to λ 3100, which were recorded by Prof. Fowler in 1909 as accompanying the group of bands in the visible region, appear to have undergone no further investigation. In view of the important part played by hydride band spectra in the correlation of molecular and atomic electronic energy levels, it was thought that a study of these features might prove of interest in yielding further information on the energy states of the MgH molecule. The present paper deals with observations on the band at λ 2430; details of an investigation of the other features of the ultra-violet spectrum will be given in a later communication.


2021 ◽  
Vol 11 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
H. Amekura ◽  
M. Toulemonde ◽  
K. Narumi ◽  
R. Li ◽  
A. Chiba ◽  
...  

AbstractDamaged regions of cylindrical shapes called ion tracks, typically in nano-meters wide and tens micro-meters long, are formed along the ion trajectories in many insulators, when high energy ions in the electronic stopping regime are injected. In most cases, the ion tracks were assumed as consequences of dense electronic energy deposition from the high energy ions, except some cases where the synergy effect with the nuclear energy deposition plays an important role. In crystalline Si (c-Si), no tracks have been observed with any monomer ions up to GeV. Tracks are formed in c-Si under 40 MeV fullerene (C60) cluster ion irradiation, which provides much higher energy deposition than monomer ions. The track diameter decreases with decreasing the ion energy until they disappear at an extrapolated value of ~ 17 MeV. However, here we report the track formation of 10 nm in diameter under C60 ion irradiation of 6 MeV, i.e., much lower than the extrapolated threshold. The diameters of 10 nm were comparable to those under 40 MeV C60 irradiation. Furthermore, the tracks formed by 6 MeV C60 irradiation consisted of damaged crystalline, while those formed by 40 MeV C60 irradiation were amorphous. The track formation was observed down to 1 MeV and probably lower with decreasing the track diameters. The track lengths were much shorter than those expected from the drop of Se below the threshold. These track formations at such low energies cannot be explained by the conventional purely electronic energy deposition mechanism, indicating another origin, e.g., the synergy effect between the electronic and nuclear energy depositions, or dual transitions of transient melting and boiling.


2020 ◽  
Vol 1643 ◽  
pp. 012155
Author(s):  
S. Pirrie ◽  
C. Wheldon ◽  
Tz. Kokalova ◽  
J. Bishop ◽  
R. Hertenberger ◽  
...  

2019 ◽  
Vol 21 (26) ◽  
pp. 14376-14386 ◽  
Author(s):  
Pan Jiang ◽  
Xiaoping Chi ◽  
Wenke Qi ◽  
Qihe Zhu ◽  
Min Cheng ◽  
...  

Various patterns of rotational dependence for the photodissociation branching ratios and irregular angular distributions of the photofragments have been observed.


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