Abstract

In the present work, water clusters with the addition of an electrophilic molecule such as ethanol have been studied by time of flight mass spectrometry (TOFMS). Mass distributions of molecular clusters of ethanol, water, and ethanol-water mixed clusters were obtained by two different ionization methods: electron ionization (EI) and picosecond laser photo-ionization (PI) at a wavelength of 355 nm. It was shown that short pulse laser ionization increases the signal intensity and promotes the extension of the detected mass range of the clusters in comparison with EI. Much larger clusters were detected in our experiments with respect to the current literature. The autocorrelation function (AF) was introduced in the analysis of the composition of the water clusters in terms of fundamental periodicities for obtaining information on clusters formation mechanisms. Besides, it was found that ethanol molecules are capable of substitutional interaction with hydrogen-bonded water clusters in ethanol-water binary mixtures but the self-association of ethanol was the dominant process. Moreover, the increase of ethanol concentration promotes both the formation of hydrated ethanol clusters and the self-association of ethanol clusters in ethanol-water binary mixtures. The formation of water-rich clusters and subsequent metastable fragmentation were found to be the dominant processes determining the water-rich cluster distribution, irrespective of the ionization process, while the ionization process significantly affects the ethanol-rich cluster distribution.

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