Abstract

Dissociative electron attachment (DEA) to acetone (CH3COCH3), perfluoroacetone (CF3COCF3) and acetylene (HCCH) is studied in the gas phase under collision-free conditions. The results are compared with those recently obtained from a study on electron attachment to homogeneous clusters of acetone and perfluoroacetone (Martin et al., 2009). Gas phase acetone and perfluoroacetone show a series of DEA resonances extending over a wide energy range and leading to various fragment ions. Perfluoroacetone additionally shows a strong signal due to the formation of the parent anion close to zero energy. In strong contrast to that, the cluster analogues exhibit only a low energy resonance while fragmentation is strongly suppressed. Such behaviour mirrors the intrinsic decomposition mechanisms which proceeds rather via predissociation involving a loose transition state than by direct dissociation along repulsive potential energy surfaces. This picture is confirmed by a time-of-flight (TOF) analysis of the fragment ions from the isolated compounds revealing that all fragment ions are formed with only low translational energy. DEA to acetylene leads to C2H− and C2− arising from different resonance regions, with C2H− as the prominent signal at 3eV resulting from predissociation of the π* resonance.

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