Olga Lakhmanskaya
University of Innsbruck
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Featured researches published by Olga Lakhmanskaya.
Nature Physics | 2015
Daniel Hauser; Seunghyun Lee; F. Carelli; Steffen Spieler; Olga Lakhmanskaya; Eric S. Endres; Sunil Kumar; Franco A. Gianturco
Understanding low-temperature molecular collisions is challenging, but using non-resonant photodetachment makes it possible to study the state-resolved dynamics of the inelastic collisions between hydroxyl ions and cold helium buffer gas.
Journal of Physical Chemistry A | 2014
Eric S. Endres; Olga Lakhmanskaya; Daniel Hauser; Stefan E. Huber; T. Best; Sunil Kumar; Michael Probst
In the interstellar medium (ISM) ion–molecule reactions play a key role in forming complex molecules. Since 2006, after the radioastronomical discovery of the first of by now six interstellar anions, interest has grown in understanding the formation and destruction pathways of negative ions in the ISM. Experiments have focused on reactions and photodetachment of the identified negatively charged ions. Hints were found that the reactions of CnH(–) with H2 may proceed with a low (<10(–13) cm(3) s(–1)), but finite rate [Eichelberger, B.; et al. Astrophys. J. 2007, 667, 1283]. Because of the high abundance of molecular hydrogen in the ISM, a precise knowledge of the reaction rate is needed for a better understanding of the low-temperature chemistry in the ISM. A suitable tool to analyze rare reactions is the 22-pole radiofrequency ion trap. Here, we report on reaction rates for Cn(–) and CnH(–) (n = 2, 4, 6) with buffer gas temperatures of H2 at 12 and 300 K. Our experiments show the absence of these reactions with an upper limit to the rate coefficients between 4 × 10(–16) and 5 × 10(–15) cm(3) s(–1), except for the case of C2(–), which does react with a finite rate with H2 at low temperatures. For the cases of C2H(–) and C4H(–), the experimental results were confirmed with quantum chemical calculations. In addition, the possible influence of a residual reactivity on the abundance of C4H(–) and C6H(–) in the ISM were estimated on the basis of a gas-phase chemical model based on the KIDA database. We found that the simulated ion abundances are already unaffected if reaction rate coefficients with H2 were below 10(–14) cm(3) s(–1).
Physical Review A | 2016
Seunghyun Lee; Daniel Hauser; Olga Lakhmanskaya; Steffen Spieler; Eric S. Endres; Katharina Geistlinger; Sunil Kumar
We present a method to measure rotational transitions of molecular anions in the terahertz domain by sequential two-photon absorption. Ion excitation by bound-bound terahertz absorption is probed by absorption in the visible on a bound-free transition. The visible frequency is tuned to a state-selective photodetachment transition of the excited anions. This provides a terahertz action spectrum for just few hundred molecular ions. To demonstrate this we measure the two lowest rotational transitions, J=1<-0 and J =2<-1 of OD- anions in a cryogenic 22-pole trap. We obtain rotational transition frequencies of 598596.08(19) MHz for J=1<-0 and 1196791.57(27) MHz for J=2<-1 of OD-, in good agreement with their only previous measurement. This two-photon scheme opens up terahertz rovibrational spectroscopy for a range of molecular anions, in particular for polyatomic and cluster anions.
Journal of Chemical Physics | 2018
Olga Lakhmanskaya; Malcolm Simpson; Simon Murauer; Viatcheslav Kokoouline
We have studied photodetachment of the amidogen anion NH2- as a function of photon energy near the detachment threshold. The detachment spectrum is obtained over the energy range of 6190-6355 cm-1 from the loss rate of the anions from a cryogenic radiofrequency multipole ion trap. By modeling all accessible rotational state-to-state photodetachment transitions, we can assign rotational state-specific thresholds to the measured spectrum. In this way, we have determined the electron affinity of NH2 to be 6224 ± 1 cm-1.
New Journal of Physics | 2015
Daniel Hauser; Olga Lakhmanskaya; Seunghyun Lee; Štěpán Roučka
We have studied the three-body complex formation rate of the hydroxyl anion with molecular hydrogen at low temperatures. The formed cluster is found to quickly undergo internal proton transfer to a hydrogen anion–water complex. This is probed by photodetachment spectroscopy, which clearly distinguishes the two isomeric structures. The product cluster is the only isomer found to be stably formed at the temperature and densities employed in the experiment. The cluster then binds an additional hydrogen molecule by a second three-body collision, which appears at a rate comparable to the first formation process. This is followed by a rapid growth to larger clusters.
Faraday Discussions | 2018
Francesco Antonio Gianturco; Olga Lakhmanskaya; Mario Hernández Vera; Ersin Yurtsever
The collisional cooling of the internal rotational states of the nonlinear anion NH2- (1A1), occurring at the low temperature of a cold ion trap under helium buffer gas cooling, is examined via quantum dynamics calculations and ion decay rate measurements. The calculations employ a novel ab initio potential energy surface that describes the interaction anisotropy and range of action between the molecular anions and the neutral He atoms. The state changing integral cross sections are employed to obtain the state-to-state rate coefficients, separately for the ortho- and the para-NH2- ions. These rates are in turn used to compute the state population evolution in the trap for both species, once photodetachment by a laser is initiated in the trap. The present work shows results for the combined losses of both species after the photodetachment laser is switched on and analyzes the differences of loss kinetics between the two hyperfine isomers.
Journal of Molecular Spectroscopy | 2017
Eric S. Endres; G. Egger; Seunghyun Lee; Olga Lakhmanskaya; Malcolm Simpson
International Journal of Mass Spectrometry | 2014
Olga Lakhmanskaya; T. Best; Sunil Kumar; Eric S. Endres; Daniel Hauser; Rico Otto; S. Eisenbach; A.D. von Zastrow
Physical Review Letters | 2018
Olga Lakhmanskaya; Malcolm Simpson; Simon Murauer; Markus Nötzold; Eric S. Endres; Viatcheslav Kokoouline
Physical Review A | 2018
Eric S. Endres; Olga Lakhmanskaya; Malcolm Simpson; Steffen Spieler