A theoretical investigation of the intermolecular interaction, operative in collision complexes of He*(2 3S1), He*(2 1S0), and Ne*(3P2,0) with N2O, is carried out to explain the main results of the experimental study reported in the preceding paper. The analysis is carried out by means of a semiempirical method based on the identification, modeling, and combination of the leading interaction components, including the effect of the selective polarization of the more external electronic cloud of the metastable atom in the intermolecular electric field. These and other crucial aspects of our approach have been quantitatively verified by ab initio calculations. The proposed method permits to evaluate the interaction at any configuration of the complexes and provides a useful and inexpensive representation of the intermolecular potential energy for dynamics studies. The main experimental findings can be rationalized taking into account the critical balancing between molecular orientation effects in the intermolecular interaction field and the ionization probability. These orientation effects tend to become less pronounced with increasing collision energy.
The double photoionization of HCl molecules by synchrotron radiation has been studied in the energy range between 30 and 50 eV. The HCl(2+) and Cl(2+) product ions have been detected by a photoelectron-photoion-coincidence technique, while the H(+)+Cl(+) formation, which follows the double ionization of HCl, has been studied by photoelectron-photoion-photoion coincidence. The photon energy threshold for the production of HCl(2+) ions has been found to be 35.4+/-0.6 eV, while for the dissociative channel leading to H(+)+Cl(+), it has been measured a threshold at 36.4+/-0.6 eV and a change in the slope of the cross-section energy dependence at 38.7+/-0.7 eV. The production of H+Cl(2+) occurs with a threshold photon energy of 42.8+/-1.1 eV. These results appear to be in a good agreement with previous data by different experimental techniques and recent theoretical calculations performed by our laboratory.
The energetics of [Rg... N2O]* autoionizing collision complexes (where Rg=He or Ne) and their dynamical evolution have been studied in a crossed beam apparatus, respectively, by Penning ionization electron spectroscopy (PIES) and by mass spectrometry (MS) techniques in the thermal energy range. The PIES spectra, detected by an electron energy analyzer, were recorded for both complexes at four different collision energies. Such spectra allowed the determination of the energy shifts for Penning electron energy distributions, and the branching ratios for the population of different electronic states and for the vibrational population in the molecular nascent ions. For the [Ne...N2O]* collision complex it was found, by MS, that the autoionization leads to the formation of N2O+, NO+, O+, and NeN2O+ product ions whose total and partial cross sections were measured in the collision energy range between 0.03 and 0.2 eV. The results are analyzed exploiting current models for the Penning ionization process: the observed collision energy dependence in the PIES spectra as well as in the cross sections are correlated with the nature of the N2O molecule orbitals involved in the ionization and are discussed in term of the Rg-N2O interaction potentials, which are estimated by using a semiempirical method developed in our laboratory.
The results of this study suggest that further research is needed to identify the best treatment strategy that is safe and effective for the new population of alcoholics.
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