Abstract

Electron attachment to clusters of acetone (A), trifluoroacetone (TFA) and hexafluoroacetone (HFA) is studied in a crossed beam experiment with mass spectrometric detection of the anionic products. We find that the electron attachment properties in A change dramatically on going from isolated molecules to clusters. While single acetone is a very weak electron scavenger (via a dissociative electron attachment (DEA) resonance near 8.5 eV), clusters of A capture electrons at very low energy (close to 0 eV). The final ionic products consist of an ensemble of molecules (M) subjected to the loss of two neutral H 2 molecules ((M n −2H 2) −, n ≥ 2). Their formation at low energies can only be explained by invoking new cyclic structures and polymers. In clusters of TFA, anionic complexes containing non-decomposed molecules (M n −) including the monomer (M −) and ionic products formed by the loss of one and two HF molecules are observed. Loss of HF units is also interpreted by the formation of new cyclic structures in the anionic system. HFA is a comparatively stronger electron scavenger forming a non-decomposed anion via a narrow resonant feature near 0 eV in the gas phase. In HFA clusters, the non-decomposed parent anion is additionally observed at higher electron energies in the range 3–9 eV. The M − signal carries signatures of self-scavenging processes, i.e., inelastic scattering by one molecule and capture of the completely slowed down electron by a second molecule within the same cluster. The scavenging spectrum is hence an image of the electronically excited states of the neutral molecule.

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