| BERKELEY,
CA -- The secret lives of molecules are now less secret.
Using the U.S. Department of Energy’s Advanced Light
Source at Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, an
international team of physicists has obtained the clearest
snapshot yet of the simultaneous behavior of all the
electrons and nuclei inside a molecule. Their work,
in which they broke apart a deuterium molecule and measured
the momenta of its particles, opens the door for a more
basic understanding of molecules and the everyday processes
they drive, from breathing to rust to photosynthesis.
“Nothing
stands still. By learning how particles move, we can
probe the fundamental properties of molecules and
how they work,” says Thorsten Weber, a visiting scientist
in Berkeley Lab’s Chemical Sciences Division who conducted
the research with several other Berkeley Lab scientists,
as well as physicists from Kansas State University
and institutions in Australia, Germany, and Spain.
Their research is published in the Sept.
24 issue of /Nature/.
Like
the opening shot of a pool game, the team fired a
single photon at a two-atom deuterium molecule and
broke it into its four charged
constituents: two electrons and two nuclei (each containing
one proton and one neutron). Next, the energy and
direction of each particle was measured as it flew
from the explosion and hit a position-sensitive detector.
This information enabled the scientists to backtrack
in time and determine how the particles were oriented
inside the molecule precisely when the photon struck.
The result is a multi-dimensional picture of the particles’
movements at the moment the molecule disintegrates,
an image that inches physicists one step closer to
directly observing the inner workings of a molecule.
“We
obtained a fingerprint of the moving particles inside
the molecule at the time of photo ionization,” says
Weber. “And particle dynamics is crucial to understanding
the chemical reactions occurring in our bodies and
everywhere.”
The
combined momenta of a molecule’s electrons and nuclei
dictate its geometry and how it binds with other molecules
-- in other words, what makes the molecule tick. But
pinning down all of the particles’ momenta at the
same time has proven extremely elusive. Theoreticians,
relying on quantum mechanics, can only predict the
probability that an electron will possess a given
position or momentum. //
To
get an inside look at all the particles’ dynamics,
experimental physicists are developing ways to fragment
a molecule in a manner that preserves at least some
of its internal motion, which is no easy task.
Hit a molecule with an ion, for example, and the ion’s
momentum transfers to the electrons and nuclei, which
clouds physicists’ ability to determine their true
momenta at the time of impact. As Weber explains,
it’s like cutting a stretched rubber band with a hammer.
The rubber band breaks, but the set-up is ruined.
But
bombard a molecule with a photon, which has no mass
and no charge, and the photon mainly deposits its
energy and kick-starts the fragmentation process.
It’s like cutting the rubber band with a scalpel instead
of a hammer. With a scalpel, an observer can watch
the band explode into two fragments and, more importantly,
get a feel for the tension present in the band before
it was cut.
With
this in mind, the team used a photon from a polarized
light beam generated at the Advanced Light Source
to excite a deuterium molecule’s electrons. Usually,
this releases only one electron, but sometimes both
electrons are liberated. If this happens, the two
remaining nuclei fly apart because they are both positively
charged. In this manner, a single photon peels open
an entire molecule.
The
four particles are then guided by a combination of
electric and magnetic fields onto large detectors.
The time it takes the particles to fly from the explosion
to the detectors, and the positions where they hit,
are used to construct a three-dimensional rendition
of the particles’ momenta at the moment of fragmentation.
“We
dream of seeing what’s going on in an unperturbed
molecule, and for that we use a very sharp knife,
like a photon,” says Weber. “It offers the least momentum
transfer to blur the results, and some of the information
is preserved from the initial state.”
Although
physicists can’t yet peer inside a molecule without
altering it, this “microscope for motion,” as Weber
calls it, gives scientists the best vantage so far
of the simultaneous momenta of all of a molecule’s
particles. Its snapshots could help them learn how
molecules bind at the most basic level, not chemically,
but dynamically. They may also enable scientists to
someday peer inside more complex and biologically
important molecules such as water and carbon dioxide,
and observe how their particles govern life-sustaining
reactions. And already, with the fragmentation of
a deuterium molecule, the snapshots give theoreticians
something new to ponder.
“We
experimentalists are ahead right now. Calculating
such a few-particle break-up is a big challenge for
state-of-the-art quantum mechanics,” says Weber. “The
forces, charges, and angular momenta of a molecule’s
particles are known. We know the ingredients, but
when we observe all of the particles moving together
in a few-particle system, an image appears that doesn’t
match theoretical predictions.”
In
addition to Weber, Berkeley Lab’s Eli Rotenberg, George
Meigs, and Michael Prior contributed to the research.
Reinhard Dörner of the University of Frankfurt
led the work, which was funded in part by the Department
of Energy. Their /Nature/ article is entitled “Complete
photo-fragmentation of the deuterium molecule.”
Berkeley
Lab is a U.S. Department of Energy national laboratory
located in Berkeley, California. It conducts unclassified
scientific research and is managed by the University
of California. Visit our website at http://www.lbl.gov
<http://www.lbl.gov/>.
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