2018
DOI: 10.1002/jcc.25536
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Methods for the Simulation of the Slowing of Low‐Energy Electrons in Water

Abstract: A computational Monte Carlo simulation approach for modeling the thermalization of low-energy electrons is presented. The simulation methods rely on, and use, experimentally based cross sections for elastic and inelastic collisions. To demonstrate the different simulation options, average numbers of interactions and the range of low-energy electrons with initial energies ranging from 1 to 20 eV are calculated for density normalized gaseous water. Experimental gas-phase cross sections for (subexcitation) electr… Show more

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Cited by 1 publication
(3 citation statements)
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“…In contrast to Suzuki and co-workers, who use an EUV PES measurement to determine G i ( E ) → g i ( E ) transformations, we derive the G i ( E ) → g i ( E ) transformations from Monte Carlo simulations of the electron transport equations in water, using an algorithm similar to those used by Signorell, Wörner, Green, and corresponding co-workers. 25 , 43 , 52 …”
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confidence: 99%
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“…In contrast to Suzuki and co-workers, who use an EUV PES measurement to determine G i ( E ) → g i ( E ) transformations, we derive the G i ( E ) → g i ( E ) transformations from Monte Carlo simulations of the electron transport equations in water, using an algorithm similar to those used by Signorell, Wörner, Green, and corresponding co-workers. 25 , 43 , 52 …”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Following the approach of Suzuki and co-workers, we then assume that the measured UV photoelectron spectra can be fit to a linear combination of g i ( E ), given by I meas ( E ) = ∑ i c i g i ( E ), where g i ( E ) are the measured eKE profiles representing the effect of distortion by inelastic scattering on the initial Gaussian distributions G i ( E ). In contrast to Suzuki and co-workers, who use an EUV PES measurement to determine G i ( E ) → g i ( E ) transformations, we derive the G i ( E ) → g i ( E ) transformations from Monte Carlo simulations of the electron transport equations in water, using an algorithm similar to those used by Signorell, Wörner, Green, and corresponding co-workers. ,, …”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
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