Photoelectron trapping in N2O 7sigma-->ksigma resonant ionization
Vibrationally resolved photoelectron spectroscopy of the N2O+(A 2Sigma+) state is used to compare the dependence of the photoelectron dynamics on molecular geometry for two shape resonances in the same ionization channel. Spectra are acquired over the photon energy range of 18< or =hv< or =55...
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Veröffentlicht in: | The Journal of chemical physics 2005-07, Vol.123 (1), p.014307-014307 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Vibrationally resolved photoelectron spectroscopy of the N2O+(A 2Sigma+) state is used to compare the dependence of the photoelectron dynamics on molecular geometry for two shape resonances in the same ionization channel. Spectra are acquired over the photon energy range of 18< or =hv< or =55 eV. There are three single-channel resonances in this range, two in the 7sigma-->ksigma channel and one in the 7sigma-->kpi channel. Vibrational branching ratio curves are determined by measuring vibrationally resolved photoelectron spectra as a function of photon energy, and theoretical branching ratio curves are generated via Schwinger variational scattering calculations. In the region 30< or =hv< or =40 eV, there are two shape resonances (ksigma and kpi). The ksigma ionization resonance is clearly visible in vibrationally resolved measurements at hv=35 eV, even though the total cross section in this channel is dwarfed by the cross section in the degenerate, more slowly varying 7sigma-->kpi channel. This ksigma resonance is manifested in non-Franck-Condon behavior in the approximately antisymmetric v3 stretching mode, but it is not visible in the branching ratio curve for the approximately symmetric v1 stretch. The behavior of the 35-eV ksigma resonance is compared to a previously studied N2O 7sigma-->ksigma shape resonance at lower energy. The mode sensitivity of the 35-eV ksigma resonance is the opposite of what was observed for the lower-energy resonance. The contrasting mode-specific behavior observed for the high- and low-energy 7sigma-->ksigma resonances can be explained on the basis of the "approximate" symmetry of the quasibound photoelectron resonant wave function, and the contrasting behavior reflects differences in the continuum electron trapping. An examination of the geometry dependence of the photoelectron dipole matrix elements shows that the ksigma resonances have qualitatively different dependences on the individual bond lengths. The low-energy resonance is influenced only by changes in the end-to-end length of the molecule, whereas the higher-energy resonance depends on the individual N-N and N-O bond lengths. Branching ratios are determined for several vibrational levels, including the symmetry-forbidden bending mode, and all of the observed behavior is explained in the context of an independent particle, Born-Oppenheimer framework. |
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ISSN: | 0021-9606 |