Imaging superatomic molecular orbitals in a C60 molecule through four 800-nm photons

Author:

Zhang G. P.1,Zhu H. P.12,Bai Y. H.3,Bonacum J.1,Wu X. S.2,George Thomas F.4

Affiliation:

1. Department of Physics, Indiana State University, Terre Haute, Indiana 47809, USA

2. Laboratory of Solid State Microstructures and School of Physics, Nanjing University, Nanjing 210093, P. R. China

3. Office of Information Technology, Indiana State University, Terre Haute, Indiana 47809, USA

4. Office of the Chancellor and Center for Nanoscience, Departments of Chemistry and Biochemistry and Department of Physics and Astronomy, University of Missouri — St. Louis, St. Louis, Missouri 63121, USA

Abstract

Superatomic molecular orbitals (SAMOs) in C 60 are ideal building blocks for functional nanostructures. However, imaging them spatially in the gas phase has been unsuccessful. It is found experimentally that if C 60 is excited by an 800-nm laser, the photoelectron casts an anisotropic velocity image, but the image becomes isotropic if excited at a 400-nm wavelength. This diffuse image difference has been attributed to electron thermal ionization, but more recent experiments (800 nm) reveal a clear nondiffuse image superimposed on the diffuse image, whose origin remains a mystery. Here we show that the nondiffuse anisotropic image is the precursor of the f SAMOs. We predict that four 800-nm photons can directly access the 1f SAMO, and with one more photon, can image the orbital, with the photoelectron angular distribution having two maxima at 0° and 180° and two humps separated by 56.5°. Since two 400-nm photons only resonantly excite the spherical 1s SAMO and four 800-nm photons excite the anisotropic 1f SAMO, our finding gives a natural explanation of the nondiffuse image difference, complementing the thermal scenario.

Publisher

World Scientific Pub Co Pte Lt

Subject

Condensed Matter Physics,Statistical and Nonlinear Physics

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