Login / Signup

Photoelectron spectroscopy from a liquid flatjet.

Dominik M StemerTillmann ButtersackHenrik HaakSebastian MalerzHanns Christian ScheweFlorian TrinterKaren MudrykMichele PuginiBruno CredidioRobert SeidelUwe HergenhahnGerard MeijerStephan ThürmerBernd Winter
Published in: The Journal of chemical physics (2023)
We demonstrate liquid-jet photoelectron spectroscopy from a flatjet formed by the impingement of two micron-sized cylindrical jets of different aqueous solutions. Flatjets provide flexible experimental templates enabling unique liquid-phase experiments that would not be possible using single cylindrical liquid jets. One such possibility is to generate two co-flowing liquid-jet sheets with a common interface in vacuum, with each surface facing the vacuum being representative of one of the solutions, allowing face-sensitive detection by photoelectron spectroscopy. The impingement of two cylindrical jets also enables the application of different bias potentials to each jet with the principal possibility to generate a potential gradient between the two solution phases. This is shown for the case of a flatjet composed of a sodium iodide aqueous solution and neat liquid water. The implications of asymmetric biasing for flatjet photoelectron spectroscopy are discussed. The first photoemission spectra for a sandwich-type flatjet comprised of a water layer encapsulated by two outer layers of an organic solvent (toluene) are also shown.
Keyphrases
  • ionic liquid
  • solid state
  • sensitive detection
  • high resolution
  • single molecule
  • aqueous solution
  • high frequency
  • cross sectional
  • climate change