Ultrafast isomerization initiated by X-ray core ionization

CE Liekhus-Schmaltz, I Tenney, T Osipov… - Nature …, 2015 - nature.com
CE Liekhus-Schmaltz, I Tenney, T Osipov, A Sanchez-Gonzalez, N Berrah, R Boll, C Bomme
Nature communications, 2015nature.com
Rapid proton migration is a key process in hydrocarbon photochemistry. Charge migration
and subsequent proton motion can mitigate radiation damage when heavier atoms absorb X-
rays. If rapid enough, this can improve the fidelity of diffract-before-destroy measurements of
biomolecular structure at X-ray-free electron lasers. Here we study X-ray-initiated
isomerization of acetylene, a model for proton dynamics in hydrocarbons. Our time-resolved
measurements capture the transient motion of protons following X-ray ionization of carbon K …
Abstract
Rapid proton migration is a key process in hydrocarbon photochemistry. Charge migration and subsequent proton motion can mitigate radiation damage when heavier atoms absorb X-rays. If rapid enough, this can improve the fidelity of diffract-before-destroy measurements of biomolecular structure at X-ray-free electron lasers. Here we study X-ray-initiated isomerization of acetylene, a model for proton dynamics in hydrocarbons. Our time-resolved measurements capture the transient motion of protons following X-ray ionization of carbon K-shell electrons. We Coulomb-explode the molecule with a second precisely delayed X-ray pulse and then record all the fragment momenta. These snapshots at different delays are combined into a ‘molecular movie’ of the evolving molecule, which shows substantial proton redistribution within the first 12 fs. We conclude that significant proton motion occurs on a timescale comparable to the Auger relaxation that refills the K-shell vacancy.
nature.com
以上显示的是最相近的搜索结果。 查看全部搜索结果