Probing the interplay between geometric and electronic-structure features via high-harmonic spectroscopy
Author(s) -
Timothy T. Gorman,
Timothy D. Scarborough,
Paul M. Abanador,
François Mauger,
Dietrich Kiesewetter,
Péter Sándor,
Sanjay Khatri,
Kenneth A. Lopata,
Kenneth J. Schäfer,
Pierre Agostini,
Mette B. Gaarde,
Louis F. DiMauro
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
the journal of chemical physics
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.071
H-Index - 357
eISSN - 1089-7690
pISSN - 0021-9606
DOI - 10.1063/1.5086036
Subject(s) - dipole , molecular physics , spectroscopy , polarization (electrochemistry) , atomic physics , density functional theory , molecule , ab initio , molecular geometry , electronic structure , chemistry , physics , computational chemistry , quantum mechanics
We present molecular-frame measurements of the recombination dipole matrix element (RDME) in CO, NO, and carbonyl sulfide (OCS) molecules using high-harmonic spectroscopy. Both the amplitudes and phases of the RDMEs exhibit clear imprints of a two-center interference minimum, which moves in energy with the molecular alignment angle relative to the laser polarization. We find that whereas the angle dependence of this minimum is consistent with the molecular geometry in CO and NO, it behaves very differently in OCS; in particular, the phase shift which accompanies the two-center minimum changes sign for different alignment angles. Our results suggest that two interfering structural features contribute to the OCS RDME, namely, (i) the geometrical two-center minimum and (ii) a Cooper-like, electronic-structure minimum associated with the sulfur end of the molecule. We compare our results to ab initio calculations using time-dependent density functional theory and present an empirical model that captures both the two-center and the Cooper-like interferences. We also show that the yield from unaligned samples of two-center molecules is, in general, reduced at high photon energies compared to aligned samples, due to the destructive interference between molecules with different alignments.
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