The mechanism of ionization of helium droplets has been investigated in numerous reports but one observation has not found a satisfactory explanation: How are $He^+$ ions formed and ejected from undoped droplets at electron energies below the ionization threshold of the free atom? Does this path exist at all? A measurement of the ion yields of $He^+$ and $He_2^+$ as a function of electron energy, electron emission current, and droplet size reveals that metastable $He^{*-}$ anions play a crucial role in the formation of free $He^+$ at subthreshold energies. The proposed model is testable.
We report on the production and study of stable, highly charged droplets of superfluid helium. Using a novel experimental setup we produce neutral beams of liquid helium nanodroplets containing millions of atoms or more that can be ionized by electro
n impact, mass-per-charge selected, and ionized a second time before being analyzed. Droplets containing up to 55 net positive charges are identified and the appearance sizes of multiply charge droplets are determined as a function of charge state. We show that the droplets are stable on the millisecond time scale of the experiment and decay through the loss of small charged clusters, not through symmetric Coulomb explosions.
We show that a single photon can ionize the two helium atoms of the helium dimer in a distance up to 10 {deg}A. The energy sharing among the electrons, the angular distributions of the ions and electrons as well as comparison with electron impact dat
a for helium atoms suggest a knock-off type double ionization process. The Coulomb explosion imaging of He_2 provides a direct view of the nuclear wave function of this by far most extended and most diffuse of all naturally existing molecules.
The utility of a continuous beam of He droplets for the assembly and surface deposition of Ag clusters, <N(Ag)> ~ 300 - 6 000, is studied with transmission electron microscopy. Images of the clusters on amorphous carbon substrates obtained at short d
eposition times have provided for a measure of the size distribution of the metal clusters. The average sizes of the deposited clusters are in good agreement with an energy balance based estimate of Ag cluster growth in He droplets. Measurements of the deposition rate indicate that upon impact with the surface the He-embedded cluster is attached with high probability. The stability of the deposited clusters on the substrate is discussed.
Acene molecules (anthracene, tetracene, pentacene) and fullerene (C$_{60}$) are embedded in He nanodroplets (He$_N$) and probed by EUV synchrotron radiation. When resonantly exciting the He nanodroplets, the embedded molecules M are efficiently ioniz
ed by the Penning reaction $mathrm{He}_N^*+mathrm{M}rightarrowmathrm{He}_N + mathrm{M}^+ + e^-$. However, the Penning electron spectra are broad and structureless -- showing no resemblance neither with those measured by binary Penning collisions, nor with those measured for dopants bound to the He droplet surface. The similarity of all four spectra indicates that electron spectra of embedded species are substantially altered by electron-He scattering. Simulations based on elastic binary electron-He collisions qualitatively reproduce the measured spectra, but require the assumption of unexpectedly large He droplets.
Electron ionization of helium droplets doped with cesium or potassium results in doubly and, for cesium, triply charged cluster ions. The smallest observable doubly charged clusters are $Cs_{9}^{2+}$ and $K_{11}^{2+}$; they are a factor two smaller t
han reported previously. The size of potassium dications approaches the Rayleigh limit nRay for which the fission barrier is calculated to vanish, i.e. their fissilities are close to 1. Cesium dications are even smaller than nRay, implying that their fissilities have been significantly overestimated. Triply charged cesium clusters as small as $Cs_{19}^{3+}$ are observed; they are a factor 2.6 smaller than previously reported. Mechanisms that may be responsible for enhanced formation of clusters with high fissilities are discussed.
Michael Renzler
,Matthias Daxner
,Nikolaus Weinberger
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(2016)
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"On Subthreshold Ionization of Helium Droplets, Ejection of He+, and the Role of Anions"
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Paul Scheier
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