Licentiate thesis: Collisions between keV ions and Polycyclic Aromatic Hydrocarbon (PAH) molecules or clusters
by
Fabian Seitz(Stockholm University, Department of Physics)
→
Europe/Stockholm
FA32
FA32
Description
This thesis summarizes the results from a series of experiments with polycyclic aromatic
hydrocarbon (PAH) clusters and monomers in collisions with positively charged ions. With
low charge state projectiles we detect singly and doubly charged intact molecules, ionization
with losses of H-atoms or C2Hx molecules, and smaller CnHx
+ fragments. The intensity
distribution indicates that this fragmentation is mainly thermally driven. With high charge
state projectiles, H- and C2Hx-loss processes become very weak. These results and smaller-n
CnHx
+ fragments compared to the low projectile charge state case suggest that charge-driven
fragmentation processes are important here. In experiments with pure PAH clusters the
fragment spectra are dominated by the singly charged intact monomer both for low and high
charge state projectiles. Long series of singly and doubly charged product clusters of
decreasing intensities with increasing size appear with low charge state projectiles and we
conclude that the induced charge and the locally induced excitation energies redistribute
quickly in PAH clusters before fragmentation. We find that hot singly charged PAH clusters
then must evaporate slowly by ejecting single molecules, as we describe with a simple
evaporation model. Highly charged ions colliding with PAH clusters eventually give strong
internal heating of the individual molecules. This effect is suggested to be due to efficient
transfer of the Coulomb energy to the internal degrees of freedom in the molecules in highly
charged clusters during charge-driven fragmentation processes. Finally, we compare the
ionization and fragmentation of the C16H10-isomers pyrene and fluoranthene. We then find
subtle but distinct differences which may be rationalized by means of quantum-chemical
calculations of monomer ionization energies and the classical over-the-barrier model for
target ionization.