Literature DB >> 16833985

High-LET radiolysis of liquid water with 1H+, 4He2+, 12C6+, and 20Ne9+ ions: effects of multiple ionization.

Jintana Meesungnoen1, Jean-Paul Jay-Gerin.   

Abstract

Monte Carlo simulations are used to investigate the effects of multiple ionization of water molecules on the yields of formation of free radical and molecular species, including molecular oxygen, in the radiolysis of pure, deaerated liquid water by using different types of radiation (1H+, 4He2+, 12C6+, and 20Ne9+ ions) up to approximately 900 keV/microm, at neutral pH and 25 degrees C. Taking into account the double, triple, and quadruple ionizations of water, the primary (or "escape") yields (at 10(-6) s) of the various radiolytic species (G(e(aq)-), G(H*), G(H2), G(*OH), G(HO2*/O2*-), and G(H2O2) are calculated as a function of the linear energy transfer (LET) of the radiation. Our results quantitatively reproduce the large increase observed in G(HO2*/O2*-) at high LET. Under the conditions of this study, the mechanisms of triple and quadruple ionizations contribute only weakly to the production of HO2*/O2*-. With the exception of protons, our calculations also simultaneously predict a maximum in G(H2O2) corresponding to the LET of approximately 4.5-MeV helium ions (approximately 100 keV/microm) and approximately 110-MeV carbon ions (approximately 180 keV/microm). This maximum occurs where G(HO2*/O2*-) begins to rise sharply, suggesting, in agreement with previous experimental data, that the yields of HO2*/O2*- and H2O2 are closely linked. Moreover, our results show a steep increase in the initial and primary yields of molecular oxygen with increasing LET, giving support to the "oxygen in heavy-ion tracks" hypothesis. By contrast, it is found that, in the whole LET range considered, the incorporation of multiple ionization in the simulations has only little effect on the variation of our computed G(e(aq)-), G(H*), G(H2), and G(*OH) values as a function of LET. As expected, G(e(aq)-) and G(*OH) decrease continuously with increasing LET. G(H*) at first increases and then decreases at high LET. Finally, G(H2) monotonically rises with increasing LET. Our calculated yield values compare generally very well with experiment.

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Year:  2005        PMID: 16833985     DOI: 10.1021/jp058037z

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Phys Chem A        ISSN: 1089-5639            Impact factor:   2.781


  12 in total

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