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Dissociative excitation of H2, HD, and D2 by electron impactTime-of-flight techniques have been used to investigate the electron-impact dissociation of H2, HD, and D2 in order to determine the effect of isotopic mass variation in the target molecule on the dissociative excitation process. At incident electron energies near 100 eV, the time-of-flight spectrum produced from each molecule consists of atoms in the metastable 2s state and in high-lying long-lived Rydberg levels. The individual time-of-flight distributions, kinetic-energy spectra, and relative differential cross sections for these two species resulting from each molecule have been measured. The kinetic-energy spectrum of the Rydberg atoms produced from dissociative excitation of H2 was notably dissimilar in shape from the corresponding distributions produced from HD and D2. Also the 2s and Rydberg production cross sections differed between the three molecules. In the dissociation of the heteronuclear HD molecule, the ratio of fast H(2s) atoms to D(2s) atoms was about 1 to 1, while the same ratio comparing the Rydberg atoms was nearly 2 to 1. These differences indicate the influence of the mass variation on the position of the Franck-Condon region in the production of 2s atoms and on the competition between autoionization and dissociation in the formation of Rydberg fragments.
Document ID
19780028279
Acquisition Source
Legacy CDMS
Document Type
Reprint (Version printed in journal)
External Source(s)
Authors
Carnahan, B. L.
(Pittsburgh Univ. Pittsburgh, PA, United States)
Zipf, E. C.
(Pittsburgh, University Pittsburgh, Pa., United States)
Date Acquired
August 9, 2013
Publication Date
September 1, 1977
Publication Information
Publication: Physical Review A - General Physics
Subject Category
Atomic And Molecular Physics
Accession Number
78A12188
Funding Number(s)
CONTRACT_GRANT: NGL-39-011-030
CONTRACT_GRANT: NSF ATM-75-21889
Distribution Limits
Public
Copyright
Other

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