| Literature DB >> 35782906 |
Philipp Rosenberger1,2, Ritika Dagar1,2, Wenbin Zhang1,2,3, Ana Sousa-Castillo4, Marcel Neuhaus1,2, Emiliano Cortes4, Stefan A Maier4,5,6, Cesar Costa-Vera7, Matthias F Kling1,2,8,9, Boris Bergues1,2.
Abstract
Abstract: We investigate the strong-field ion emission from the surface of isolated silica nanoparticles aerosolized from an alcoholic solution, and demonstrate the applicability of the recently reported near-field imaging at 720 nm [Rupp et al., Nat. Comm., 10(1):4655, 2019] to longer wavelength (2 μ m) and polarizations with arbitrary ellipticity. Based on the experimental observations, we discuss the validity of a previously introduced semi-classical model, which is based on near-field driven charge generation by a Monte-Carlo approach and classical propagation. We furthermore clarify the role of the solvent in the surface composition of the nanoparticles in the interaction region. We find that upon injection of the nanoparticles into the vacuum, the alcoholic solvent evaporates on millisecond time scales, and that the generated ions originate predominantly from covalent bonds with the silica surface rather than from physisorbed solvent molecules. These findings have important implications for the development of future theoretical models of the strong-field ion emission from silica nanoparticles, and the application of near-field imaging and reaction dynamics of functional groups on isolated nanoparticles. Supplementary Information: The online version contains supplementary material available at 10.1140/epjd/s10053-022-00430-6.Entities:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35782906 PMCID: PMC9236975 DOI: 10.1140/epjd/s10053-022-00430-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Eur Phys J D At Mol Opt Phys ISSN: 1434-6060 Impact factor: 1.611
Fig. 1Schematic depiction of the setup. A dried aerosol of silica nanoparticles (cyan) with a diameter of 300 nm is collimated by an aerodynamic lens and introduced into the reaction nanoscope. Laser pulses are focused into the stream of nanoparticles. Laser-generated electrons (blue) and ions (red) are detected by a channeltron and a delay-line detector, respectively. The polarization state of the laser pulses is controlled by a quarter wave plate. The coordinate system indicated here is used throughout the work
Fig. 2Comparison between the field enhancement in the plane (panels A, C, E) and the projection of the proton momenta onto the xy-plane (panels B, D, F) for 300 nm silica nanoparticles. The gray symbols indicate the polarization state for each panel. First column (panels A,B): results for linear polarization (waveplate angle: 0). Second column (panels C, D): results for an elliptic polarization (waveplate angle: 35). Third column (panels E,F): results for circular polarization (waveplate angle: 45). The vertical streaks in panels D and F are caused by artifacts of the delay line detection. The pulse energy is 18 J in all cases, corresponding to a peak intensity of about W/cm in the linearly polarized case
Fig. 3Mollweide projection of the angular distribution of the proton yield from 300 nm silica nanoparticles for a pulse energy of 18 J (i.e., W/cm for lin. pol.). The top row (panels A–C) shows the experimental data. The results of the simulation are displayed in the bottom row (panels D-F). The columns correspond to the same waveplate angles as in Fig. 2 (0, 35, 45) as indicated by the symbols in the middle row
Fig. 4Panel A: Histogram of position vs. time of flight for a measurement of 300 nm silica particles in (fully deuterated) methanol-d4 for circular polarization. Panel B: Time-of-flight spectra of ions emitted from 300 nm silica particles. The particles were aerosolized from dispersions in standard methanol (std.) and methanol-d4 (deut.). Inset: Time-of-flight histograms for ion masses of 1 u and 2 u on a logarithmic scale
Fig. 5Upper panels: Momentum distributions of H (A) and CH (B) emitted from 300 nm silica nanoparticles. The data was taken at the field amplitude indicated by the corresponding arrows in Panel C. Panel C: Mean ion energies for the same particles as a function of the electric field amplitude and for three polarization states as indicated by the symbols, corresponding to waveplate angles of 45, 30, 0 (left to right). The solid curves show the mean proton energies; the dashed curves show the energies of the CH ion. The shaded regions represent the width (standard deviation) of the ion energy distribution. The conversion to peak intensity is carried out without cycle-averaging:
Fig. 6Panel A: Energy correlation histogram of H and CH ions detected in coincidence. Panel B: The covariance map of the same data, defined as: , where in our case X and Y are the kinetic energy of H and the CH and i, j are the indices of the corresponding energy bins. The angle brackets denote averaging over all laser shots. The dashed lines follow