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Dive into the research topics where Ronny Golnak is active.

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Featured researches published by Ronny Golnak.


Angewandte Chemie | 2011

On the Origin of the Hydrogen‐Bond‐Network Nature of Water: X‐Ray Absorption and Emission Spectra of Water–Acetonitrile Mixtures

Kathrin M. Lange; René Könnecke; Mikhail A. Soldatov; Ronny Golnak; Jan-Erik Rubensson; A. V. Soldatov; Emad F. Aziz

A liquid microjet was used to obtain oxygen K-edge X-ray absorption and emission spectra of water–acetonitrile mixtures of various compositions. The observed spectral changes are unambiguously related to the increasing number of broken hydrogen bonds with decreasing water concentration, and the hydrogen-bond network of liquid water can thus be addressed on purely experimental grounds without the need for theoretical modeling.


Journal of Physical Chemistry B | 2013

Nature of the Chemical Bond of Aqueous Fe2+ Probed by Soft X-ray Spectroscopies and ab Initio Calculations

Kaan Atak; Sergey I. Bokarev; Malte Gotz; Ronny Golnak; Kathrin M. Lange; Nicholas Engel; Marcus Dantz; Edlira Suljoti; Oliver Kühn; Emad F. Aziz

Aqueous iron(II) chloride is studied by soft X-ray absorption, emission, and resonant inelastic Raman scattering techniques on the Fe L-edge and O K-edge using the liquid-jet technique. Soft X-ray spectroscopies allow in situ and atom-specific probing of the electronic structure of the aqueous complex and thus open the door for the investigation of chemical bonding and molecular orbital mixing. In this work, we combine theoretical ab initio restricted active space self-consistent field and local atomic multiplet calculations with experimental soft X-ray spectroscopic methods for a description of the local electronic structure of the aqueous ferrous ion complex. We demonstrate that the atomic iron valence final states dominate the resonant inelastic X-ray scattering spectra of the complex over the ligand-to-metal charge transfer transitions, which indicates a weak interaction of Fe(2+) ion with surrounding water molecules. Moreover, the oxygen K-edge also shows only minor changes due to the presence of Fe(2+) implying a small influence on the hydrogen-bond network of water.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2012

Origin of dark-channel X-ray fluorescence from transition-metal ions in water.

Robert Seidel; Samira Ghadimi; Kathrin M. Lange; Sébastien Bonhommeau; Mikhail A. Soldatov; Ronny Golnak; Alexander Kothe; René Könnecke; A. V. Soldatov; Stephan Thürmer; Bernd Winter; Emad F. Aziz

The nonradiative dark channels in the L-edge fluorescence spectra from transition-metal aqueous solution identify the ultrafast charge-transfer processes playing an important role in many biological and chemical systems. Yet, the exact origin of such spectral dips with respect to the X-ray transmission spectrum has remained unclear. In the present study we explore the nature of the underlying decay mechanism of 2p core-excited Co(2+) in water by probing the nonradiative Auger-type electron emission channel using photoelectron spectroscopy from a liquid microjet. Our measurements demonstrate unequivocally that metal-to-water charge transfer quenches fluorescence and will inevitably lead to a dip in the total-fluorescence-yield X-ray absorption spectrum. This is directly revealed from the resonant enhancement of valence signal intensity arising from the interference of two identical final states created by a direct and Auger-electron emission, respectively.


Journal of Physical Chemistry B | 2014

Chemical bonding in aqueous ferrocyanide: experimental and theoretical X-ray spectroscopic study.

Nicholas Engel; Sergey I. Bokarev; Edlira Suljoti; Raul Garcia‐Diez; Kathrin M. Lange; Kaan Atak; Ronny Golnak; Alexander Kothe; Marcus Dantz; Oliver Kühn; Emad F. Aziz

Resonant inelastic X-ray scattering (RIXS) and X-ray absorption (XA) experiments at the iron L- and nitrogen K-edge are combined with high-level first-principles restricted active space self-consistent field (RASSCF) calculations for a systematic investigation of the nature of the chemical bond in potassium ferrocyanide in aqueous solution. The atom- and site-specific RIXS excitations allow for direct observation of ligand-to-metal (Fe L-edge) and metal-to-ligand (N K-edge) charge-transfer bands and thereby evidence for strong σ-donation and π-backdonation. The effects are identified by comparing experimental and simulated spectra related to both the unoccupied and occupied molecular orbitals in solution.


Journal of Materials Chemistry | 2014

Electronic structural insights into efficient MnOx catalysts

Munirah Khan; Edlira Suljoti; Archana Singh; Shannon A. Bonke; Tim Brandenburg; Kaan Atak; Ronny Golnak; Leone Spiccia; Emad F. Aziz

Soft X-ray absorption and resonant inelastic X-ray scattering at the Mn L-edge are established as tools for gaining electronic structural insights into water oxidation catalysis. The MnOx catalyst with the lowest d–d transitions, strongest charge transfer and a higher proportion of Mn3+ over Mn2+/4+ produces itinerant electrons that contribute to a higher catalytic activity.


Journal of Physical Chemistry Letters | 2012

DMSO-Water Clustering in Solution Observed in Soft X-ray Spectra.

Nicholas Engel; Kaan Atak; Kathrin M. Lange; Malte Gotz; Mikhail A. Soldatov; Ronny Golnak; Edlira Suljoti; Jan-Erik Rubensson; Emad F. Aziz

The significant deviation from the ideality of dimethyl sulfoxide (DMSO)/water mixtures can be addressed based on the change of the local molecular orbitals of each solvent upon mixing. Oxygen K-edge absorption and emission spectra of DMSO/water solutions were measured using the liquid microjet technique. The spectra demonstrate that the hydrogen bond network in liquid water is already influenced at small DMSO concentrations, and at the molar fraction xDMSO = 0.43 we find strong evidence of DMSO-water clustering reflected by the influence on the occupied molecular orbitals.


Scientific Reports | 2016

Joint Analysis of Radiative and Non-Radiative Electronic Relaxation Upon X-ray Irradiation of Transition Metal Aqueous Solutions

Ronny Golnak; Sergey I. Bokarev; Robert Seidel; Jie Xiao; Gilbert Grell; Kaan Atak; Isaak Unger; Stephan Thürmer; Saadullah G. Aziz; Oliver Kühn; Bernd Winter; Emad F. Aziz

L-edge soft X-ray spectroscopy has been proven to be a powerful tool to unravel the peculiarities of electronic structure of transition metal compounds in solution. However, the X-ray absorption spectrum is often probed in the total or partial fluorescence yield modes, what leads to inherent distortions with respect to the true transmission spectrum. In the present work, we combine photon- and electron-yield experimental techniques with multi-reference first principles calculations. Exemplified for the prototypical FeCl2 aqueous solution we demonstrate that the partial yield arising from the Fe3s → 2p relaxation is a more reliable probe of the absorption spectrum than the Fe3d → 2p one. For the bonding-relevant 3d → 2p channel we further provide the basis for the joint analysis of resonant photoelectron and inelastic X-ray scattering spectra. Establishing the common energy reference allows to assign both spectra using the complementary information provided through electron-out and photon-out events.


Review of Scientific Instruments | 2013

Time-of-flight electron spectrometer for a broad range of kinetic energies.

Alexander Kothe; Jan Metje; Martin Wilke; Alexandre Moguilevski; Nicholas Engel; Ruba Al-Obaidi; Clemens Richter; Ronny Golnak; Igor Yu. Kiyan; Emad F. Aziz

A newly constructed time-of-flight electron spectrometer of the magnetic bottle type is characterized for electron detection in a broad range of kinetic energies. The instrument is designed to measure the energy spectra of electrons generated from liquids excited by strong laser fields and photons in the range of extreme ultra violet and soft X-rays. Argon inner shell electrons were recorded to calibrate the spectrometer and investigate its characteristics, such as energy resolution and collection efficiency. Its energy resolution ΔE/E of 1.6% allows resolving the Ar 2p spin orbit structure at kinetic energies higher than 100 eV. The collection efficiency is determined and compared to that of the spectrometer in its field-free configuration.


Journal of Physical Chemistry A | 2016

Undistorted X-ray Absorption Spectroscopy Using s-Core-Orbital Emissions

Ronny Golnak; Jie Xiao; Kaan Atak; Isaak Unger; Robert Seidel; Bernd Winter; Emad F. Aziz

Detection of secondary emissions, fluorescence yield (FY), or electron yield (EY), originating from the relaxation processes upon X-ray resonant absorption has been widely adopted for X-ray absorption spectroscopy (XAS) measurements when the primary absorption process cannot be probed directly in transmission mode. Various spectral distortion effects inherent in the relaxation processes and in the subsequent transportation of emitted particles (electron or photon) through the sample, however, undermine the proportionality of the emission signals to the X-ray absorption coefficient. In the present study, multiple radiative (FY) and nonradiative (EY) decay channels have been experimentally investigated on a model system, FeCl3 aqueous solution, at the excitation energy of the Fe L-edge. The systematic comparisons between the experimental spectra taken from various decay channels, as well as the comparison with the theoretically simulated Fe L-edge XA spectrum that involves only the absorption process, indicate that the detection of the Fe 3s → 2p partial fluorescence yield (PFY) gives rise to the true Fe L-edge XA spectrum. The two key characteristics generalized from this particular decay channel-zero orbital angular momentum (i.e., s orbital) and core-level emission-set a guideline for obtaining undistorted X-ray absorption spectra in the future.


Review of Scientific Instruments | 2014

Electrochemical flowcell for in-situ investigations by soft x-ray absorption and emission spectroscopy

Christoph Schwanke; Ronny Golnak; Jie Xiao; Kathrin M. Lange

A new liquid flow-cell designed for electronic structure investigations at the liquid-solid interface by soft X-ray absorption and emission spectroscopy is presented. A thin membrane serves simultaneously as a substrate for the working electrode and solid state samples as well as for separating the liquid from the surrounding vacuum conditions. In combination with counter and reference electrodes this approach allows in-situ studies of electrochemical deposition processes and catalytic reactions at the liquid-solid interface in combination with potentiostatic measurements. As model system in-situ monitoring of the deposition process of Co metal from a 10 mM CoCl2 aqueous solution by X-ray absorption and emission spectroscopy is presented.

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Emad F. Aziz

Helmholtz-Zentrum Berlin

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Kaan Atak

Helmholtz-Zentrum Berlin

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Jie Xiao

Helmholtz-Zentrum Berlin

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Edlira Suljoti

Helmholtz-Zentrum Berlin

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Nicholas Engel

Helmholtz-Zentrum Berlin

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Bernd Winter

Helmholtz-Zentrum Berlin

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Marc F. Tesch

Helmholtz-Zentrum Berlin

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Malte Gotz

Helmholtz-Zentrum Berlin

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