Ab initio study of highly charged ion-induced Coulomb explosion imaging
Misa Viveiros, Samuel S. Taylor, Cody Covington, and K\'alm\'an Varga

TL;DR
This study uses advanced simulations to understand how the impact point and orientation of energetic ions affect the accuracy of Coulomb explosion imaging in determining molecular structures, revealing key factors that influence experimental fidelity.
Contribution
It provides a detailed theoretical analysis of impact geometry effects on Coulomb explosion imaging, highlighting how different trajectories influence ionization and structural reconstruction accuracy.
Findings
Trajectories avoiding atomic collisions produce more accurate structural reconstructions.
Planar trajectories cause greater ionization and broader momentum distributions.
Impact geometry significantly affects ionization and imaging fidelity.
Abstract
We present a theoretical investigation of ion-induced Coulomb explosion imaging (CEI) of pyridazine molecules driven by energetic C projectiles, using time-dependent density-functional theory (TDDFT) with Ehrenfest nuclear dynamics. By systematically varying the projectile's impact point and orientation relative to the molecular plane, we compare orthogonal and in-plane trajectories and quantify their effects on fragment momenta, electron-density response, and atom-resolved ionization. Newton plots and time-resolved density snapshots show that trajectories avoiding direct atomic collisions yield the most faithful structural reconstructions, whereas direct impacts impart large, highly localized momenta that distort the recovered geometry. Planar trajectories generate substantially greater ionization and broader momentum distributions than orthogonal ones due to deeper traversal…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAtomic and Molecular Physics · Mass Spectrometry Techniques and Applications · Energetic Materials and Combustion
