Production of Metastable CO3+through the Strong-Field Ionization and Coulomb Explosion of Formic Acid Dimer

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Abstract

Femtosecond laser pulses are utilized to drive multiple ionization of formic acid dimers and the resulting ions are studied using time-of-flight mass spectrometry. The interaction of formic acid dimer with 200 fs linearly polarized laser pulses of 400 nm with intensities of up to 3.7 × 1015 W/cm2 produces a metastable carbon monoxide trication. Experimental kinetic energy release (KER) measurements of the ions are consistent with molecular dynamics simulations of the Coulomb explosion of a formic acid dimer and suggest that no significant movement occurs during ionization. KER values were recorded as high as 44 eV for CO3+, in agreement with results from a classical Molecular Dynamics simulation of fully ionized formic acid dimers. Potential energy curves for CO3+ are calculated using the multireference configuration interaction (MRCI+Q) method to confirm the existence of an excited metastable 2ς state with a significant potential barrier with respect to dissociation. This combined experimental and theoretical effort reveals the existence of metastable CO3+ through direct observation for the first time.

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Sutton, S. F., Rotteger, C. H., Miller, D. M., Quiroz, L. M., Sen, A., Tarakeshwar, P., & Sayres, S. G. (2022). Production of Metastable CO3+through the Strong-Field Ionization and Coulomb Explosion of Formic Acid Dimer. Journal of Physical Chemistry A, 126(31), 5099–5106. https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.jpca.2c02609

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