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1.
Phys Rev Lett ; 131(7): 076002, 2023 Aug 18.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37656857

ABSTRACT

Superfluid helium nanodroplets are an ideal environment for the formation of metastable, self-organized dopant nanostructures. However, the presence of vortices often hinders their formation. Here, we demonstrate the generation of vortex-free helium nanodroplets and explore the size range in which they can be produced. From x-ray diffraction images of xenon-doped droplets, we identify that single compact structures, assigned to vortex-free aggregation, prevail up to 10^{8} atoms per droplet. This finding builds the basis for exploring the assembly of far-from-equilibrium nanostructures at low temperatures.

2.
J Chem Phys ; 158(22)2023 Jun 14.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37309895

ABSTRACT

Infrared (IR) spectroscopy using ultracold helium nanodroplet matrices has proven to be a powerful method to interrogate encapsulated ions, molecules, and clusters. Due to the helium droplets' high ionization potential, optical transparency, and ability to pick up dopant molecules, the droplets offer a unique modality to probe transient chemical species produced via photo- or electron impact ionization. In this work, helium droplets were doped with acetylene molecules and ionized via electron impact. Ion-molecule reactions within the droplet volume yield larger carbo-cations that were studied via IR laser spectroscopy. This work is focused on cations containing four carbon atoms. The spectra of C4H2+, C4H3+, and C4H5+ are dominated by diacetylene, vinylacetylene, and methylcyclopropene cations, respectively, which are the lowest energy isomers. On the other hand, the spectrum of C4H4+ ions hints at the presence of several co-existing isomers, the identity of which remains to be elucidated.

3.
J Chem Phys ; 156(20): 204306, 2022 May 28.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35649867

ABSTRACT

Helium droplets are unique hosts for isolating diverse molecular ions for infrared spectroscopic experiments. Recently, it was found that electron impact ionization of ethylene clusters embedded in helium droplets produces diverse carbocations containing three and four carbon atoms, indicating effective ion-molecule reactions. In this work, similar experiments are reported but with the saturated hydrocarbon precursor of ethane. In distinction to ethylene, no characteristic bands of larger covalently bound carbocations were found, indicating inefficient ion-molecule reactions. Instead, the ionization in helium droplets leads to formation of weaker bound dimers, such as (C2H6)(C2H4)+, (C2H6)(C2H5)+, and (C2H6)(C2H6)+, as well as larger clusters containing several ethane molecules attached to C2H4 +, C2H5 +, and C2H6 + ionic cores. The spectra of larger clusters resemble those for neutral, neat ethane clusters. This work shows the utility of the helium droplets to study small ionic clusters at ultra-low temperatures.

4.
Sci Adv ; 7(50): eabk2247, 2021 Dec 10.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34890219

ABSTRACT

Quantum fluid droplets made of helium-3 (3He) or helium-4 (4He) isotopes have long been considered as ideal cryogenic nanolabs, enabling unique ultracold chemistry and spectroscopy applications. The droplets were believed to provide a homogeneous environment in which dopant atoms and molecules could move and react almost as in free space but at temperatures close to absolute zero. Here, we report ultrafast x-ray diffraction experiments on xenon-doped 3He and 4He nanodroplets, demonstrating that the unavoidable rotational excitation of isolated droplets leads to highly anisotropic and inhomogeneous interactions between the host matrix and enclosed dopants. Superfluid 4He droplets are laced with quantum vortices that trap the embedded particles, leading to the formation of filament-shaped clusters. In comparison, dopants in 3He droplets gather in diffuse, ring-shaped structures along the equator. The shapes of droplets carrying filaments or rings are direct evidence that rotational excitation is the root cause for the inhomogeneous dopant distributions.

5.
J Chem Phys ; 152(23): 234306, 2020 Jun 21.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32571041

ABSTRACT

The phenomenon of liquid jets disintegrating into droplets has attracted the attention of researchers for more than 200 years. An overwhelming fraction of these studies considered classical viscous liquid jets issuing into ambient atmospheric gases, such as air. Here, we present an optical shadowgraphy study of the disintegration of a cryogenic liquid helium jet produced with a 5 µm diameter nozzle into vacuum. The physical properties of liquid helium, such as its density, surface tension, and viscosity, change dramatically as the jet flows through the nozzle and evaporatively cools in vacuum, eventually reaching the superfluid state. In this study, we demonstrate that, at different stagnation pressures and temperatures, droplet formation may involve spraying, capillary breakup, jet branching, and/or flashing and cavitation. The average droplet sizes produced in this work range from 3.4 × 1012 to 6.5 × 1012 helium atoms or 6.7-8.3 µm in diameter. This paper also reports on the distributions of sizes and shapes of the resulting droplets.

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