Abstract

We demonstrate a method to determine the structures of the primary photodissociation products from a cryogenically cooled parent ion. In this approach, a target ion is cooled by a pulse of buffer gas and tagged in a 20 K Paul trap. The cold ion is then photodissociated by pulsed (∼5 ns) UV laser excitation, and the ionic products are trapped, cooled, and tagged by introduction of a second buffer gas pulse in the same trap. The tagged fragments are then ejected into a triple focusing, UV/vis/IR time-of-flight photofragmentation mass spectrometer which yields vibrational and electronic spectra of the mass-selected photofragments. These methods are demonstrated by application to the 266 nm photodissociation of the Rhodamine 6G cation to yield the R575 fragment ion based on loss of ethene as well as to a weaker secondary fragment arising from loss of m/z 43.

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