Abstract

One established method for the measurement of the cross section for electron capture involves the introduction of small quantities of the gas under study (sample gas) into a carrier gas, which determines the distribution of electron energies for specified values of E/P. A summary of the available information on the distribution of electron energies in ethylene, nitrogen, and argon shows that for E/P values ranging from 0 to 2.0 V cm—1 Torr—1 the three carrier gases can be used to cover the important range of electron energies between thermal energy and 10 eV. This method has been used to study dissociative electron capture in D2O, C6H5Cl, and C6H5Br. Measurements show that the values for the energy integrated dissociative capture cross sections are approximately 4.6×10—18 cm2 eV for D2O, 1.4×10—17 cm2 eV for C6H5Cl, and 5.7×10—17 cm2 eV for C6H5Br occurring at electron energies near 6.5, 0.76, and 0.70 eV, respectively. That the low-energy processes in C6H5Cl and C6H5Br correspond to dissociative capture has been confirmed by the appearance of Cl— and Br— in a negative-ion time-of-flight mass spectrometer.

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