Abstract
Interatomic Coulombic Decay (ICD) and related interatomic and intermolecular autoionization mechanisms are ubiquitous decay processes of excited atoms and molecules in an environment. It is commonly accepted that the efficiency of ICD of an ionized atom in a cluster increases with an increasing number of nearest neighbors. Here, we present a method for experimental validation of this assumption by a site-specific and quantitative comparison of ICD and its main competitor, Auger decay, in core-level ionized Kr clusters. Our results are in quantitative agreement with scaled theoretical calculations on Kr2.
Introduction
Nonlocal interatomic and intermolecular decay processes are nowadays known to be ubiquitous mechanisms for the relaxation of electronically excited states in dense media. The theoretical prediction of Interatomic Coulombic Decay (ICD) in 19971 re-opened a rapidly growing field of experimental and theoretical research2,3,4. In ICD, the energy stored in an electronic vacancy of an atom is transferred to a remote neighboring atom or molecule, thereby ionizing it. If local autoionization is energetically forbidden, ICD may be the only accessible nonradiative relaxation mechanism. ICD has now been studied extensively and proven to occur in van der Waals-bonded (e.g., rare gas or molecular clusters) and hydrogen-bonded systems (e.g., water clusters, liquids, and microsolvated biomolecules)4. While early experimental work5,6,7,8,9,10 focused on ICD of electronic inner-valence vacancies, the initial states may be prepared in various scenarios, including inner-shell photoionization11,12, (resonant) Auger decay cascades13,14,15,16,17, electron18,19 or ion impact20. Also, other energy or charge transfer processes have been identified; for more details, see reviews in refs. 2,3,4. From early21 and more recent22 theoretical works, it has been commonly accepted that the efficiency of ICD increases linearly with the number of nearest neighbors available as decay partners. Although efficiency is a crucial parameter to estimate the importance of all nonlocal processes and their inclusion into models of real-life scenarios, experimental validations of this important and strong assumption using different systems and methods are rare. Only evidence from two experiments has been reported so far: in large Ne clusters, a wider Lorentzian decay width of the 2s photoline (indicating faster decays) was found for the bulk component compared to the surface component8. If assumed that the radiative decay width is negligible, which was proven some years later23, the larger width for the bulk photoelectron peak provides evidence that, indeed, the ICD efficiency is higher for atoms with more neighbors. In water clusters, the ICD efficiency was determined quantitatively as a function of mean cluster size24 and was shown to increase from small to larger clusters. However, in these systems, several factors (nature of the hydrogen bond network, competition between ICD and nuclear dynamics24) complicate an interpretation with respect to the number of nearest neighbors. Also, results for each size were averaged over all sites in the respective clusters. With the purpose of establishing a universal method to quantify the ICD efficiency, we investigate a specific variant of ICD, namely core-level ICD, which was just recently observed in van der Waals clusters12. In contrast to ICD after inner-valence ionization, core-level ICD is a decay channel of inner-shell vacancies and therefore a competitor of the local Auger decay. Since the Auger decay rate is independent of neighboring atoms, experimental determination of the branching ratio between these competing processes in a single measurement enables us to evaluate the relative efficiency of the ICD process with respect to the Auger decay.
Results
We study the specific case of decay after Kr 3d photoionization. Since radiative decay of such shallow core-levels is typically negligible, the dominant relaxation pathway of the 3d core vacancy is Auger decay, leading to the well-known MNN-Auger spectrum25,26 and leaving one atom of the n-atom Kr cluster in a one-site dicationic state with two 4p vacancies:
The competing core-level ICD process is sketched in Fig. 1: the transition energy is transferred to a neighboring atom leading to a two-site delocalized dicationic state of the cluster:
The black dots represent the electrons occupying the 3d, 4s, and 4p shells in Kr, where fine structure splitting of the orbitals has been neglected for simplicity. The 3d core vacancy (depicted as a white dot) is filled by a valence (4p, orange dot) electron from the same atom, and the released energy is transferred to the neighboring atom, which is thereby ionized. The ICD electron is shown as an orange dot (4p electron), leaving the second Kr atom.
The number of nearest neighbors of the initially 3d-ionized atom and, as we will show, the efficiency of the ICD process depends on the position of the atom in either the bulk or the surface of the cluster. In this experiment, we achieve site sensitivity by coincident detection of the Auger or ICD electron with the respective 3d photoelectron. The 3d photoelectron shows a spectroscopically measurable difference in binding energies for atoms at different cluster sites, e.g., for atoms on the surface or in the bulk of a cluster, due to differences in screening27.
Experimental results
The high-energy part of the Auger spectrum, attributed to Kr III 4p−2 final state configurations, and the corresponding core-level ICD features, detected in coincidence with the 3d5/2 fine structure photoelectron component, are shown in Fig. 2a. The 3d5/2 photoelectron spectrum of Kr, which is presented in Fig. 2b, is well separated into atomic and cluster signal, with the latter being further distinguished into signals originating from surface or bulk atoms, respectively27. The blue and green shaded areas in Fig. 2b indicate ranges of binding energies in which photoemission preferentially occurs from only one of the two types of sites; filtering for electron pairs with a photoelectron falling into one of these intervals is therefore well-suited to establish conditions under which the site-selective Auger and ICD spectra can be observed, presented in Fig. 2a (surface: green solid trace, bulk: blue dashed trace).
a High-energy Auger and core-level ICD electrons detected in coincidence with 3d5/2 photoelectrons from bulk (blue dashed) and surface (green solid) of Kr clusters each normalized to equal area of the M5N2,3N2,3 Auger spectrum between 52.1 and 59.2 eV kinetic energy. b Spectrum of the Kr 3d5/2 photoelectron measured in coincidence with Auger or core-level ICD electrons for atoms and clusters in a partially condensed cluster jet. The cluster signal is additionally split into surface and bulk signals. The blue and green shaded areas indicate the electron kinetic energy ranges used to identify the coincident events shown in a.
Each spectrum in Fig. 2a is normalized to the intensity of the M5N2,3N2,3 Auger electron spectrum with the final configuration of 4p−2 (on the right-hand side of the dashed line), and it is already obvious that the core-level ICD signal originating from bulk atoms has a higher intensity relative to that of the surface atoms. The ICD to Auger decay ratio as a measure of the relative ICD efficiency is obtained by integrating and comparing the signal for both competing processes after background subtraction. To evaluate the ICD efficiency as a function of the average number of neighboring atoms, we determined the branching ratio for electrons in coincidence with photoelectrons with binding energies varying in 0.1 eV steps across the photoelectron cluster peaks. The resulting ratios are shown in Fig. 3.
The left y-axis shows the ICD branching ratio in percent (black squares), i.e., the ICD electron intensity normalized to the total intensity of ICD and Auger electron signals as a function of the photoelectron binding energy, and the right y-axis shows the corresponding absolute scale given by the product of the absolute photoionization cross section σ and the ICD branching ratio βICD. The error bar shows the statistical error for the branching ratio; the error for the absolute scale is not shown due to unknown uncertainties from used literature values. The two black dotted lines indicate the theoretically calculated values for the ICD branching ratio of bulk and corner atoms. The corresponding photoelectron spectrum is shown in the background (gray shaded area).
We observe a significant increase in the core-level ICD efficiency during the transition from atoms located at the surface to those located in the bulk. This is directly correlated to the number of nearest neighbors, which increases from 6 (corner) to 12 (bulk) atoms. Note that due to the intrinsic width of the states27, we cannot resolve different surface states corresponding to corner, edge, and face atoms. We observe, however, an increasing ICD branching ratio for surface atoms with lower binding energies, which is a strong indication that indeed different surface sites contribute to the signal in this range.
Theoretical calculations
For a better quantitative evaluation of the experimental ICD branching ratios, we performed theoretical calculations of the expected value in Kr2 dimers. As in ref. 22, we have employed the non-relativistic Fano-ADC(2)x-Stieltjes method28 to compute total and partial decay rates of the 3d vacancy in Kr2 dimers. The partial rates were determined through operators Pβ, projecting on individual decay channels within the final states configuration space as described in refs. 29,30. The calculations were performed using the cc-pwCV5Z-PP basis set, in which the scalar relativistic effects are taken into account via a 10-electron effective core potential (ECP). To better represent the continuum, the basis was further augmented by 5s, 5p, 5d, and 5f continuum-like Gaussian functions31. For further details, see the supplementary material in ref. 22. At the equilibrium interatomic distance Req = 4.0 Å of the Kr2 dimer, the total calculated ICD probability is (0.09 ± 0.01)%. However, if only the 4p−2 one-site Auger decay channels are taken into account, as in the present experiment, the ICD probability increases to (0.13 ± 0.01)% per neighboring atom. Based on the icosahedral structure of the cluster27, this results in an ICD to Auger decay branching ratio of (0.78 ± 0.06)% for corner atoms to (1.56 ± 0.12)% for bulk atoms. The calculations reproduce the experimental values of (0.63 ± 0.12)% to (2.07 ± 0.20)% reasonably, except for an underestimation for bulk atoms. We expect this discrepancy to originate mainly from two contributions which are not considered in the theoretical model. First, ICD with next-nearest neighbors may contribute stronger for bulk than for surface atoms, as the contribution is non-negligible32. Second, the average interatomic distance is somewhat smaller for bulk atoms, resulting in a higher ICD decay rate.
To support this conjecture, we have evaluated the 4p−2 ICD to Auger decay branching ratio as a function of the interatomic distance in the dimer, see Fig. 4. In the region around 4.0 Å, the experimental value for the bulk atoms can be reproduced by assuming the internuclear distance in the bulk to be shortened to about 3.93 Å, which seems entirely plausible.
Finally, we mention that relativistic effects might play a role. Indeed, according to the full four-component description of the Auger decay in a Kr atom, they might account for as much as 20% of the decay rate33. However, recent more accurate Fano-ADC(2,2) calculations34 suggest that the non-relativistic theory with scalar relativistic effects accounted for through ECP can fully reproduce the experimental Auger rates if double Auger decay channels are included. Since these channels are filtered out in the present coincidence experiment, the Fano-ADC(2)x method combined with ECP is the appropriate method for its interpretation.
ICD probability on an absolute scale
Using atomic reference data, we can determine the ICD probability on an absolute scale. The absolute photoionization cross section of Kr 3d of 3.35 Mb at 137.5 eV photon energy35 and the intensity ratio of 3d5/2 to 3d3/2 of 1.4526 yields the absolute Kr 3d5/2 photoionization cross section of σ = 1.98 Mb. The atomic branching ratios of the Auger decay following 3d5/2 photoionization26 were then used to obtain the branching ratio of Auger decays into 4p−2 final states as βAuger = 21.5%. Multiplication of this value with the ICD branching ratio (black dots shown in Fig. 3) yields the site-specific ICD branching ratio βICD, with respect to the initial photoionization. Finally, the core-level ICD probability can be put on an absolute scale by multiplication of the absolute photoionization cross section σ and the branching ratio βICD, the result of which is depicted in Fig. 3 (right y-axis). The calculated ICD probability σ ⋅ βICD must be multiplied by the total uncertainty of the used literature values, namely the 3d photoionization cross section, the 3d5/2 to 3d3/2 ratio, and the Auger decay branching ratio into 4p−2 final states and the statistical error shown in Fig. 3. But the uncertainties of the literature values are unavailable. Additionally, we assume that the atomic quantities are valid for clusters.
Conclusion
In conclusion, we experimentally quantified the dependency of ICD rates on the number of nearest neighbors by measuring the ratio of ICD events to the competing Auger decay using electron–electron coincidence spectroscopy. The obtained ICD efficiency of up to (2.07 ± 0.20)% is in good agreement with our theoretical calculations. Due to overlapping states of different surface sites, a linear dependence cannot be confirmed unambiguously. Good agreement between theory and experiment suggests, however, that except for a slight underestimation of bulk values, state-of-the-art theory explains the reality satisfactorily. Additionally, we estimated absolute ICD cross sections using atomic reference data. We emphasize that the experimental method we present is universal as long as local and nonlocal decay can be spectroscopically separated. This makes it potentially applicable to more complex systems, e.g., molecular clusters or liquids, in which quantification of ICD efficiencies is still lacking.
Methods
Experimental technique
The experiment was performed at the Helmholtz-Zentrum Berlin (BESSY II) using synchrotron radiation at the UE56-2 PGM-2 beamline36. The experimental set-up for electron–electron coincidence spectroscopy consists of a magnetic bottle type time-of-flight electron spectrometer37 and a cryogenic cluster source cooled by a liquid N2 cryostat. The cluster jet was produced by the supersonic expansion of gaseous Kr through an 80 μm conical copper nozzle (30° full opening angle) cooled to T = 130 K and with a back pressure of p = 540 mbar. It passed a 1-mm skimmer before crossing the monochromatic synchrotron radiation. Note that under these experimental conditions, the target jet will contain both clusters and uncondensed atoms. Using empirical scaling laws38, the mean size of the clusters is estimated to be 〈N〉 = 177 atoms. At 137.5 eV exciting-photon energy, a −39 V retardation potential was applied to the electron drift tube to resolve individual channels of the Auger electron spectrum.
Data acquisition and evaluation
The presented data has been recorded over 102 min and contains 1.1 million events of electron–electron coincidences. These events were measured in time intervals of two consecutive synchrotron pulses (circulation time between two pulses: 800 ns) to estimate the number of accidental coincidences and eliminate these from the measured data.
In Fig. 2b, the obtained photoelectron spectrum is shown in the form of a histogram of all measured events within the given kinetic energy interval. The time-of-flight data is calibrated to kinetic energies using the well-known atomic M5N2,3N2,3 Auger electron features26. The spectra of true coincidental events in energy ranges assigned to photoelectrons from cluster surface or bulk sites, as indicated by the shaded areas in Fig. 2b, are depicted in Fig. 2a and show the corresponding Kr M5N2,3N2,3 Auger and core-level ICD spectra.
To obtain the ICD branching ratios (see Fig. 3), we used a sequence of 0.1 eV-wide filters across the cluster photoelectron spectrum and determined the coincidentally measured Auger and ICD electron spectra for each slice. After background subtraction, we integrated the Auger (IAuger) and ICD (IICD) signals, respectively, and thus calculated the ICD branching ratio \({\beta }_{{{{{{{{\rm{ICD}}}}}}}}}=\frac{{I}_{{{{{{{{\rm{ICD}}}}}}}}}}{{I}_{{{{{{{{\rm{Auger}}}}}}}}}+{I}_{{{{{{{{\rm{ICD}}}}}}}}}}\).
Computational method
The partial ICD and Auger decay widths were computed using the Fano-ADC-Stieltjes method28,34. This method relies on the Fano–Feshbach theory39, according to which a resonance state is composed of a bound \(\left\vert \Phi \right\rangle\) and continuum \(\vert {\chi }_{\beta ,{\epsilon }_{\beta }}\rangle\) components, where the continuum component describes the motion of the free electron of energy ϵβ in the open channel β. The partial decay width associated with a specific channel is given as
where E\({}_{r}\approx \langle \Phi | \hat{H}| \Phi \rangle\) is the real part of the resonance energy. The total width is obtained from Eq. (3) by summing over all open channels.
To represent the required multielectron wave functions, we employed the ADC(2)x method for the Green’s function in the intermediate state representation40. It allows to separate the electronic configuration space into the subspace Q, containing the bound components, and the subspace P of the final continuum states. The channel projectors Pβ were constructed using the generalized localization procedure as described in ref. 29. The subspace of the closed channels is then defined as Q = 1 − ∑βPβ. The Diagonalization of the projected electronic Hamiltonians, QHQ and PHP, provides \(\left\vert \Phi \right\rangle\) and \(\vert {\chi }_{\beta ,{\epsilon }_{\beta }}\rangle\). Since square-integrable Gaussian type functions were used as the basis set in the calculations, we employed the Stieltjes imaging technique41,42 for proper normalization of the continuum component.
The calculations were performed using the cc-pwCV5Z-PP basis set, accounting for the scalar relativistic effect via a 10-electron effective core potential. For an improved representation of the continuum electronic states, the basis was augmented by 5s-type, 5p-type, 5d-type, and 5f-type Kaufmann–Baumeister–Jungen continuum-like functions31 (for further details, see the supplementary material of ref. 22). Restricted Hartree–Fock reference state and the two-electron integrals required by the ADC methodology were obtained using MOLCAS quantum chemistry package43.
Data availability
Data shown in this study are available from the corresponding authors (A.H., C.K., and P.K.) upon reasonable request.
Code availability
The code used in this study is available from the corresponding authors (A.H., C.K., and P.K.) upon reasonable request.
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Acknowledgements
We thank HZB for beamtime allocation and the BESSY II staff for assistance. This work was supported by the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG) (Project No. 328961117—SFB 1319 ELCH and Research Unit FOR 1789) and the German Federal Ministry of Education and Research (BMBF) (Project 05K19RK2). P.K. acknowledges financial support from the Czech Science Foundation (Project GACR No. 22-22658S).
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A.H., A.K., and U.H. conceived the experiment. A.K., C.R., and M.F. prepared the experiment. A.H., C.K., and L.M. performed the experiment with the assistance of C.H., C.Z., D.B., N.K., R.S., and S.R.; C.K. did the data evaluation with the help of L.M. and the supervision of A.E. and A.H.; P.K. performed the theoretical calculations with the support of K.G.; C.K. and P.K. wrote the article with the support of A.E., A.H., and U.H.; All authors reviewed the results and approved the final version of this article.
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Küstner-Wetekam, C., Marder, L., Bloß, D. et al. Experimental quantification of site-specific efficiency of Interatomic Coulombic Decay after inner shell ionization. Commun Phys 6, 50 (2023). https://doi.org/10.1038/s42005-023-01166-4
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/s42005-023-01166-4
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