4 resultados para relativistic ionization front
em ArchiMeD - Elektronische Publikationen der Universität Mainz - Alemanha
Resumo:
This thesis is mainly concerned with a model calculation for generalized parton distributions (GPDs). We calculate vectorial- and axial GPDs for the N N and N Delta transition in the framework of a light front quark model. This requires the elaboration of a connection between transition amplitudes and GPDs. We provide the first quark model calculations for N Delta GPDs. The examination of transition amplitudes leads to various model independent consistency relations. These relations are not exactly obeyed by our model calculation since the use of the impulse approximation in the light front quark model leads to a violation of Poincare covariance. We explore the impact of this covariance breaking on the GPDs and form factors which we determine in our model calculation and find large effects. The reference frame dependence of our results which originates from the breaking of Poincare covariance can be eliminated by introducing spurious covariants. We extend this formalism in order to obtain frame independent results from our transition amplitudes.
Resumo:
Untersuchungen zu ionenchemischen Reaktionen und Mobilitätsmessungen an schweren Elementen in einer Puffergaszelle Die vorgelegte Arbeit beschreibt vorbereitende Untersuchungen zu ionenchemischen Reaktionen und Mobilitätsmessungen schwerer Elemente (Z>100) in einer mit Argon gefüllten Puffergaszelle. Dazu wurden am Element Erbium (Z=68), dem chemischen Homolog von Fermium (Z=100), zunächst in einem Fourier-Transformations-Massenspektrometer (FT/MS) Reaktionen mit Sauerstoff (O2), Methan (CH4) und Butylen (C4H8) untersucht und deren Reaktionskonstanten zu k(Er+O2)=(3,6±0,3)10-10cm3/s, k(Er+C4H8)=(1,3±0,1)10-10cm3/s gemessen. Für die Reaktion Er++CH4 wurde eine Obergrenze der Reaktionskonstante von k(Er+CH4)?,310-15cm3/s bestimmt. Dieselben Reaktionen wurden anschließend in einer mit 60 mbar Argon gefüllten Puffergaszelle am Tandembeschleuniger des Max-Planck-Instituts für Kernphysik in Heidelberg studiert.Das in die Zelle eingeschossene Erbium wurde nach der Thermalisierung in einem zweistufigen Laserprozess resonant ionisiert. Diese Messungen führten zu gleichen Ergebnissen wie die FT/MS-Messungen (k(Er+O2)=3,3±0,4)10-10cm3/s, k(Er+CH4)?210-17cm3/s). Die Reaktion von Erbium mit Butylen wurde ebenfalls beobachtet, eine Reaktionskonstante konnte jedoch nicht bestimmt werden. Die Reaktion von Erbium mit Sauerstoff wurde auch mit den direkt in die Puffergaszelle eingeschossenen Ionen ohne Laserionisation untersucht. Eine reproduzierbare Reaktionskonstante konnte nicht bestimmt werden, mögliche Ursachen werden diskutiert.Aus der Driftzeit der Ionen im Puffergas können Ionenmobilitäten bestimmt werden. Dies erlaubt Rückschlüsse auf die Ionenradien und damit auch auf Bindungslängen in Molekülen. Zwischen Plutonium und Americium wurde bei einer Driftzeit von (1,88±0,01) ms ein Driftzeitunterschied von (0,07±0,02) ms gemessen und daraus eine relative Verringerung des Ionenradius von Americium gegenüber dem von Plutonium um (3,1±1,3)% bestimmt. Relativistische Rechnungen sagen für den atomaren Radius von Americium gegenüber Plutonium eine Kontraktion in gleicher Größenordnung voraus; für Ionenradien existieren zur Zeit noch keine Rechnungen. Aus den gemessenen Driftzeiten des Plutoniums von (1,85±0,01) ms und Plutoniumoxids von (2,38±0,01) ms wurde eine Zunahme des Ionenradius des Plutoniumoxids gegenüber dem Plutonium um (28±2)% bestimmt.Außerdem wurden Reaktionen von Ruthenium (Z=44) und Osmium (Z=76), beides chemische Homologe von Hassium (Z=108), mit Sauerstoff in der FT/MS-Apparatur untersucht, mit dem Ziel widersprüchliche Messungen der Reaktionskonstanten aufzuklären.
Resumo:
Relativistic effects need to be considered in quantum-chemical calculations on systems including heavy elements or when aiming at high accuracy for molecules containing only lighter elements. In the latter case, consideration of relativistic effects via perturbation theory is an attractive option. Among the available techniques, Direct Perturbation Theory (DPT) in its lowest order (DPT2) has become a standard tool for the calculation of relativistic corrections to energies and properties.In this work, the DPT treatment is extended to the next order (DPT4). It is demonstrated that the DPT4 correction can be obtained as a second derivative of the energy with respect to the relativistic perturbation parameter. Accordingly, differentiation of a suitable Lagrangian, thereby taking into account all constraints on the wave function, provides analytic expressions for the fourth-order energy corrections. The latter have been implemented at the Hartree-Fock level and within second-order Møller-Plesset perturbaton theory using standard analytic second-derivative techniques into the CFOUR program package. For closed-shell systems, the DPT4 corrections consist of higher-order scalar-relativistic effects as well as spin-orbit corrections with the latter appearing here for the first time in the DPT series.Relativistic corrections are reported for energies as well as for first-order electrical properties and compared to results from rigorous four-component benchmark calculations in order to judge the accuracy and convergence of the DPT expansion for both the scalar-relativistic as well as the spin-orbit contributions. Additionally, the importance of relativistic effects to the bromine and iodine quadrupole-coupling tensors is investigated in a joint experimental and theoretical study concerning the rotational spectra of CH2BrF, CHBrF2, and CH2FI.
Resumo:
Addressing current limitations of state-of-the-art instrumentation in aerosol research, the aim of this work was to explore and assess the applicability of a novel soft ionization technique, namely flowing atmospheric-pressure afterglow (FAPA), for the mass spectrometric analysis of airborne particulate organic matter. Among other soft ionization methods, the FAPA ionization technique was developed in the last decade during the advent of ambient desorption/ionization mass spectrometry (ADI–MS). Based on a helium glow discharge plasma at atmospheric-pressure, excited helium species and primary reagent ions are generated which exit the discharge region through a capillary electrode, forming the so-called afterglow region where desorption and ionization of the analytes occurs. Commonly, fragmentation of the analytes during ionization is reported to occur only to a minimum extent, predominantly resulting in the formation of quasimolecular ions, i.e. [M+H]+ and [M–H]– in the positive and the negative ion mode, respectively. Thus, identification and detection of signals and their corresponding compounds is facilitated in the acquired mass spectra. The focus of the first part of this study lies on the application, characterization and assessment of FAPA–MS in the offline mode, i.e. desorption and ionization of the analytes from surfaces. Experiments in both positive and negative ion mode revealed ionization patterns for a variety of compound classes comprising alkanes, alcohols, aldehydes, ketones, carboxylic acids, organic peroxides, and alkaloids. Besides the always emphasized detection of quasimolecular ions, a broad range of signals for adducts and losses was found. Additionally, the capabilities and limitations of the technique were studied in three proof-of-principle applications. In general, the method showed to be best suited for polar analytes with high volatilities and low molecular weights, ideally containing nitrogen- and/or oxygen functionalities. However, for compounds with low vapor pressures, containing long carbon chains and/or high molecular weights, desorption and ionization is in direct competition with oxidation of the analytes, leading to the formation of adducts and oxidation products which impede a clear signal assignment in the acquired mass spectra. Nonetheless, FAPA–MS showed to be capable of detecting and identifying common limonene oxidation products in secondary OA (SOA) particles on a filter sample and, thus, is considered a suitable method for offline analysis of OA particles. In the second as well as the subsequent parts, FAPA–MS was applied online, i.e. for real time analysis of OA particles suspended in air. Therefore, the acronym AeroFAPA–MS (i.e. Aerosol FAPA–MS) was chosen to refer to this method. After optimization and characterization, the method was used to measure a range of model compounds and to evaluate typical ionization patterns in the positive and the negative ion mode. In addition, results from laboratory studies as well as from a field campaign in Central Europe (F–BEACh 2014) are presented and discussed. During the F–BEACh campaign AeroFAPA–MS was used in combination with complementary MS techniques, giving a comprehensive characterization of the sampled OA particles. For example, several common SOA marker compounds were identified in real time by MSn experiments, indicating that photochemically aged SOA particles were present during the campaign period. Moreover, AeroFAPA–MS was capable of detecting highly oxidized sulfur-containing compounds in the particle phase, presenting the first real-time measurements of this compound class. Further comparisons with data from other aerosol and gas-phase measurements suggest that both particulate sulfate as well as highly oxidized peroxyradicals in the gas phase might play a role during formation of these species. Besides applying AeroFAPA–MS for the analysis of aerosol particles, desorption processes of particles in the afterglow region were investigated in order to gain a more detailed understanding of the method. While during the previous measurements aerosol particles were pre-evaporated prior to AeroFAPA–MS analysis, in this part no external heat source was applied. Particle size distribution measurements before and after the AeroFAPA source revealed that only an interfacial layer of OA particles is desorbed and, thus, chemically characterized. For particles with initial diameters of 112 nm, desorption radii of 2.5–36.6 nm were found at discharge currents of 15–55 mA from these measurements. In addition, the method was applied for the analysis of laboratory-generated core-shell particles in a proof-of-principle study. As expected, predominantly compounds residing in the shell of the particles were desorbed and ionized with increasing probing depths, suggesting that AeroFAPA–MS might represent a promising technique for depth profiling of OA particles in future studies.