Full-dimensional theoretical description of vibrationally resolved valence-shell photoionization of H2O
Saikat Nandi; Taishi Ono; Kiyoshi Ueda; Aleksandar R. Milosavljević; Piero Decleva; John D. Bozek; Jesús González-Vázquez; Denys Iablonskyi; Edwin Kukk; Gianluigi Grimaldi Maliyar; Selma Engin; Fernando Martín; Kuno Kooser
Full-dimensional theoretical description of vibrationally resolved valence-shell photoionization of H2O
Saikat Nandi
Taishi Ono
Kiyoshi Ueda
Aleksandar R. Milosavljević
Piero Decleva
John D. Bozek
Jesús González-Vázquez
Denys Iablonskyi
Edwin Kukk
Gianluigi Grimaldi Maliyar
Selma Engin
Fernando Martín
Kuno Kooser
AMER INST PHYSICS
Julkaisun pysyvä osoite on:
https://urn.fi/URN:NBN:fi-fe2021042821802
https://urn.fi/URN:NBN:fi-fe2021042821802
Tiivistelmä
We have performed a full-dimensional theoretical study of vibrationally resolved photoelectron emission from the valence shell of the water molecule by using an extension of the static-exchange density functional theory that accounts for ionization as well as for vibrational motion in the symmetric stretching, antisymmetric stretching, and bending modes. At variance with previous studies performed in centrosymmetric molecules, where vibrationally resolved spectra are mostly dominated by the symmetric stretching mode, in the present case, all three modes contribute to the calculated spectra, including intermode couplings. We have found that diffraction of the ejected electron by the various atomic centers is barely visible in the ratios between vibrationally resolved photoelectron spectra corresponding to different vibrational states of the remaining H2O+ cation (the so-called v-ratios), in contrast to the prominent oscillations observed in K-shell ionization of centrosymmetric molecules, including those that only contain hydrogen atoms around the central atoms, e.g., CH4. To validate the conclusions of our work, we have carried out synchrotron radiation experiments at the SOLEIL synchrotron and determined photoelectron spectra and v-ratios for H2O in a wide range of photon energies, from threshold up to 150 eV. The agreement with the theoretical predictions is good.
Kokoelmat
- Rinnakkaistallenteet [19207]