Abstract

AlSn12 clusters were studied in electric and magnetic beam deflection experiments at nozzle temperatures of Tnozzle = 16-100 K. For 16 K, spatial separation of two fractions of clusters in the molecular beam was achieved by deflection with both an electric and a magnetic field gradient. In the electric deflection experiment, about 76% of the clusters are identified as non-polar and the rest as highly-polar, while the magnetic deflection experiment demonstrates that 37% show an atom-like and 63% a Brillouin-like magnetic response. In order to probe the connection between these fractions in electric and magnetic beam deflection, a combination of these two experiments was performed. This clearly demonstrates that the highly-polar clusters show a Brillouin-like magnetic response and only the non-polar clusters can be deflected atom-like in a magnetic field. This observation suggests that two structural isomers are present in the molecular beam, one of which is highly-symmetric, and demonstrates that spatial isomer separation of metal clusters containing heavy elements is feasible. However, vibrational excitation must also be taken into account to explain the observed magnetic response. A stepwise increase of the cluster temperature shows that suppression of the superatomic response is more sensitive to vibrational excitation than the quenching of the permanent electric dipole moment.

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