We present experimental data on H 2 formation processes on gas-phase polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbon (PAH) cations. This process was studied by exposing coronene radical cations, confined in a radio-frequency ion trap, to gas phase H atoms. Sequential attachment of up to 23 hydrogen atoms has been observed. Exposure to atomic D instead of H allows one to distinguish attachment from competing abstraction reactions, as the latter now leave a unique fingerprint in the measured mass spectra. Modeling of the experimental results using realistic cross sections and barriers for attachment and abstraction yield a 1:2 ratio of abstraction to attachment cross sections. The strong contribution of abstraction indicates that H 2 formation on interstellar PAH cations is an order of magnitude more relevant than previously thought.
Here we demonstrate high water pinning nanostructures and trapping of water droplets onto surfaces via control of roughness on a single nanometer length-scale generated by deposition of preformed gas phase distinct copper nanoparticles on hydrophilic and hydrophobic surfaces. It was found that the contact angles of the water droplets were increased to the superhydrophobic limit $150 at high nanoparticle coverages ($80%) independent of the initial type of surface. The water droplets were trapped onto the surfaces by high adhesion forces similar like the rose petal effect. The droplets are in a Wenzel state at their outer part. Local nanocapillarity can force liquid into crevices between nanoparticles and push trapped air within the center of the droplet forming a Cassie-Baxter metastable state. Hence our approach to alter the wetting state is extremely straightforward without involving special micro/nano structuring facilities, but instead using direct single nanoparticles deposition on any type of surfaces creating a rough surface on a single nanometer length-scale, allowing due to its peculiar high water pinning and nanoporous structure liquid trapping phenomena.
Sequential hydrogenation of polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbon (PAH) cations drives a gradual transition from a planar to a puckered geometry and from an aromatic to an aliphatic electronic structure. The resulting H-induced weakening of the molecular structure together with the exothermic nature of the consecutive H-attachment processes can lead to substantial molecular fragmentation. We have studied H attachment to gas-phase coronene cations in a radiofrequency ion trap using tandem mass spectrometry. With increasing hydrogenation, C2Hi loss and multifragmentation are identified as main de-excitation channels. To understand the dependence of both channels on H-exposure time, we have simulated the molecular stability and fragmentation channels of hydrogenated PAHs using a molecular dynamics approach employing potential energies determined by a density functional based tight binding method. As the coronene fragmentation patterns depend on the balance between energy deposition by H-attachment and the extent of cooling in between subsequent attachment processes, we investigate several scenarios for the energy distribution of hydrogenated PAHs. Good agreement between experiment and simulation is reached, when realistic energy distributions are considered.
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