13 research outputs found
Cascade Dissociations of Peptide Cation-Radicals. Part 1. Scope and Effects of Amino Acid Residues in Penta-, Nona-, and Decapeptides
Effects of Peptide Backbone Amide-to-Ester Bond Substitution on the Cleavage Frequency in Electron Capture Dissociation and Collision-Activated Dissociation
Application of Synchrotron Radiation Circular Dichroism for RNA Structural Analysis
International audienc
SRCD and FTIR Spectroscopies to Monitor Protein-Induced Nucleic Acid Remodeling
International audienc
Dipole-Guided Electron Capture Causes Abnormal Dissociations of Phosphorylated Pentapeptides
Collision-Induced Dissociation of Diazirine-Labeled Peptide Ions. Evidence for Brønsted-Acid Assisted Elimination of Nitrogen
Differential electron emission from polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbon molecules under fast ion impact
Interaction between polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbon (PAH) molecule and energetic ion is a subject of interest in different areas of modern physics. Here, we present measurements of energy and angular distributions of absolute double differential electron emission cross section for coronene (C24H12) and fluorene (C13H10) molecules under fast bare oxygen ion impact. For coronene, the angular distributions of the low energy electrons are quite different from that of simpler targets like Ne or CH4, which is not the case for fluorene. The behaviour of the higher electron energy distributions for both the targets are similar to that for simple targets. In case of coronene, a clear signature of plasmon resonance is observed in the analysis of forward-backward angular asymmetry of low energy electron emission. For fluorene, such signature is not identified probably due to lower oscillator strength of plasmon compared to the coronene. The theoretical calculation based on the first-order Born approximation with correct boundary conditions (CB1), in general, reproduced the experimental observations qualitatively, for both the molecules, except in the low energy region for coronene, which again indicates the role of collective excitation. Single differential and total cross sections are also deduced. An overall comparative study is presented
