Bulletin of the American Physical Society
56th Annual Meeting of the APS Division of Atomic, Molecular and Optical Physics
Monday–Friday, June 16–20, 2025; Portland, Oregon
Session B10: Attosecond Photoemission Dynamics
10:45 AM–12:33 PM,
Tuesday, June 17, 2025
Oregon Convention Center
Room: F151-152
Chair: Jan Rost, Max Planck Institute for the Physics of Complex Systems
Abstract: B10.00002 : Ionization time delay dynamics from planar molecules*
11:15 AM–11:45 AM
Presenter:
Vincent Loriot
(Université de Lyon)
Author:
Vincent Loriot
(Université de Lyon)
In this presentation, I will focus on the ionization time delays from extended molecules. At first glance, one might assume that large molecules result in scattering over a greater distance and consequently, a larger ionization time delay. However, we show that this simple view does not hold for planar molecules where the outgoing electron interacts with the delocalized hole smeared across the molecular plane. The shape and the symmetry of the ionic potential lead to a strong quadrupole contribution that significantly affects the electrostatic interaction between the photoelectron and the residual ion. The quadrupole contribution creates a less attractive potential for electrons emitted perpendicularly to the molecular plane. A weaker attraction implies a repulsive behavior, leading to photoelectrons being emitted in advance, and thus, exhibiting a negative ionization time delay.
To shed light on this physical process, we applied the RABBITT (Reconstruction of Attosecond Beating By Interference of Two-photon Transitions) method, resolved in angle and photon energy to two different C10Hx molecules. One has the atoms distributed in a plane (naphthalene) while the other forms a near-spherical structure (Adamantane). To confirm the generality of our findings, we also investigated pyrene, which is nearly twice as large, and fluorene, which has two hydrogen atoms protruding out of the molecular plane. In all cases, the planar molecules exhibit a negative ionization time delay relative to their 3D counterparts. The interpretation is supported by a simple analytical model and a state-of-the-art Static-Exchange Density Functional Theory (SE-DFT) calculation.
*CNRS; ANR-16-CE30-0012 'Circé'; ANR-15-CE30-0001 'CIMBAAD'; Fédération de recherche André Marie Ampère; the Universidad Autónoma de Madrid; The CA18222 European COST Action AttoChem (CA18222);
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