Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
1194848 International Journal of Mass Spectrometry 2006 9 Pages PDF
Abstract

In this work, we report on the dissociation kinetics of tetrathiafulvalene radical cations (TTF+). In collisions with helium, the ions were first thermalised at room temperature or cooled to −65 °C in an ion trap before injection into an ion storage ring. Delayed dissociation of photoexcited ions was measured, and the kinetics were found to be non-trivial. The time spectrum obtained after 390 nm photoexcitation was not a single exponential decay normally observed for the dissociation of ions with a narrow energy distribution. We consider two interpretations of the time spectrum, either a multiple-exponential decay or a power-law decay. The physical implication of a multiple-exponential decay requires the presence of at least three isomers that interconvert slowly on the timescale for dissociation. In contrast, a power-law model implies a broad internal energy distribution of the excited ions. The origin of a broad distribution is, however, not obvious since we believe the width of the distribution to be narrow before excitation, about 0.1 eV, and TTF+ is non-fluorescent. We, therefore, discard the power-law model in favour of the multiple-isomer model. The dominant dissociation reaction at low internal energies is loss of SCH as measured in collision-induced dissociation experiments and fragmentation of metastable ions. We suggest that excited TTF+ rearranges via local minima on the potential energy surface to higher-energy isomers either before or after the photoexcitation. Isomerisation may be entropy-driven, which reduces the rate for reverse reactions to prevent equilibrium before the dissociation step. DFT calculations were applied in the search for possible structures of isomers.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Chemistry Analytical Chemistry
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