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Featured researches published by S. Tomita.


Review of Scientific Instruments | 2002

The combination of an electrospray ion source and an electrostatic storage ring for lifetime and spectroscopy experiments on biomolecules

J.U. Andersen; P. Hvelplund; Steen Brøndsted Nielsen; S. Tomita; Helge Wahlgreen; S.P. Møller; U. V. Pedersen; James S. Forster; Thomas J. D. Jørgensen

An electrospray ion source has been coupled to an accelerator that injects ions into an electrostatic heavy-ion storage ring. Since the dc ion current produced by electrospray ionization is low (∼106 ions/s), ions are accumulated in a cylindrical ion trap filled with a helium buffer gas. The ions are collisionally damped in the buffer gas and confined to the central trap region by a rf field. Extraction from the trap occurs within a few microseconds and after acceleration through 22 kV, the ions of interest are selected by a magnet according to their mass to charge ratio. The ion bunch is subsequently injected into the ring. Both positive and negative ions have been stored, with masses ranging over 3 orders of magnitude (∼102–104 Da). From a pickup signal in the ring, the number of ions in a bunch is estimated to be of the order of 103–104 when the accumulation time is 0.1 s. Our first measurements show that we can store a sufficient number of ions to study the decay of metastable ions and to determine re...


Journal of Chemical Physics | 2006

Lifetimes of C602− and C702− dianions in a storage ring

S. Tomita; J.U. Andersen; H. Cederquist; B. Concina; O. Echt; James S. Forster; K. Hansen; B. A. Huber; P. Hvelplund; Jens Hørup Jensen; Bo Liu; B. Manil; L. Maunoury; S. Brøndsted Nielsen; Jimmy Rangama; H. T. Schmidt; Henning Zettergren

C60(2-) and C70(2-) dianions have been produced by electrospray of the monoanions and subsequent electron pickup in a Na vapor cell. The dianions were stored in an electrostatic ring and their decay by electron emission was measured up to 1 s after injection. While C70(2-) ions are stable on this time scale, except for a small fraction of the ions which have been excited by gas collisions, most of the C60(2-) ions decay on a millisecond time scale, with a lifetime depending strongly on their internal temperature. The results can be modeled as decay by electron tunneling through a Coulomb barrier, mainly from thermally populated triplet states about 120 meV above a singlet ground state. At times longer than about 100 ms, the absorption of blackbody radiation plays an important role for the decay of initially cold ions. The tunneling rates obtained from the modeling, combined with WKB estimates of the barrier penetration, give a ground-state energy 200+/-30 meV above the energy of the monoanion plus a free electron and a ground-state lifetime of the order of 20 s.


Journal of Physics B | 2004

Biomolecular ions in accelerators and storage rings

S. Brøndsted Nielsen; J. U. Andersen; P. Hvelplund; Bo Liu; S. Tomita

Recent experiments on biomolecules in accelerators and storage rings are reviewed. Topics included are measurements of geometrical cross sections of macromolecular ions, fragmentation of peptide and oligonucleotide ions after collisional electron transfer, lifetimes of excited ions, and radiative cooling. Statistical versus non-statistical decay after excitation in collisions or by photon absorption is discussed.


Physical Chemistry Chemical Physics | 2004

Photodissociation of protonated amino acids and peptides in an ion storage ring. Determination of Arrhenius parameters in the high-temperature limit

J.U. Andersen; H. Cederquist; James S. Forster; B. A. Huber; P. Hvelplund; Jens Hørup Jensen; Bo Liu; B. Manil; L. Maunoury; S. Brøndsted Nielsen; U. V. Pedersen; Jimmy Rangama; H. T. Schmidt; S. Tomita; Henning Zettergren

We have measured the time dependence of the fragmentation of protonated amino acids and peptides upon UV excitation in an electrostatic ion storage ring. After absorption of a 266 nm photon, protonated Trp (TrpH+) has a lifetime of 10–20 μs but also a component with a millisecond lifetime is present. The long lifetime may be due to fluorescence, which leads to ions with lower excitation energy, or to the decay of the Trp+˙ radical cation formed after prompt hydrogen loss in the laser interaction region. Only one component with a lifetime of about 10 μs was detected for TyrH+. The lifetime of photoexcited PheH+ is even shorter with an upper limit of a few microseconds. For the singly protonated tripeptides (LysTrpLysH+ and LysTyrLysH+), the decay curves are found to consist of a single component that can be reproduced with an assumption of statistical decay after equilibration of the photon energy among all vibrational modes. The rate constant is expressed in the Arrhenius form in terms of the microcanonical temperature, and the decay rate is obtained by integration over the energy distribution, which has a spread corresponding to the canonical energy distribution at room temperature. The resulting deviation from exponential decay makes it possible to determine the decay parameters from a measurement at a single photon wavelength. Activation energies of Ea = 1.24 ± 0.07 and 1.5 ± 0.4 eV were determined for LysTrpLysH+ and LysTyrLysH+, respectively, with pre-exponential factors of Ad = 1011.1±0.5 and 1012.9±2.6 s−1.


Journal of Chemical Physics | 2007

Stabilities of multiply charged dimers and clusters of fullerenes

Henning Zettergren; H. T. Schmidt; Peter Reinhed; H. Cederquist; Jens Jensen; P. Hvelplund; S. Tomita; B. Manil; Jimmy Rangama; B. A. Huber

The authors find even-odd variations as functions of r (<or=7) for multiple ionization of van der Waals dimers in slow Xe(30+)+[C60]2([C60C70])-->...+[C60]2(r+)([C60C70](r+)) electron-transfer collisions. This even-odd behavior is in sharp contrast to the smooth one for fullerene monomers and may be related to even-odd effects in dimer ionization energies in agreement with results from an electrostatic model. The kinetic energy releases for dimer dissociations [predominantly yielding intact fullerenes [C60]2(r+)-->C60(r1+)+C60(r2+) in the same (r1=r2) or nearby (r1=r2+/-1) charge states] are found to be low in comparison with the corresponding model results indicating that internal excitations of the separating (intact) fullerenes are important. Experimental appearance sizes for the heavier clusters of fullerenes [C60]n(r+) (n>3 and r=2-5) compare well with predictions from a new nearest-neighbor model assuming that r unit charges in [C60]n(r+) are localized to r C60 molecules such that the Coulomb energy of the system is minimized. The system is then taken to be stable if (i) two (singly) charged C60 are not nearest neighbors and (ii) the r C60(+) molecules have binding energies to their neutral nearest neighbors which are larger than the repulsive energies for the (r-1) C60(+)-C60(+) pairs. Essential ingredients in the nearest-neighbor model are cluster geometries and the present results on dimer stabilities.


Journal of Applied Physics | 2008

Vacancy-type defects in Er-doped GaN studied by a monoenergetic positron beam

Akira Uedono; C. Shaoqiang; S. Jongwon; Keita Ito; H. Nakamori; N. Honda; S. Tomita; Katsuhiro Akimoto; Hiroshi Kudo; Shoji Ishibashi

A relationship between intra-4f transitions of Er and vacancy-type defects in Er-doped GaN was studied by using a monoenergetic positron beam. Doppler broadening spectra of the annihilation radiation were measured for Er-doped GaN grown by molecular beam epitaxy. A clear correlation between the defect concentration and the photoluminescence (PL) intensity was observed. The major defect species detected by positrons was identified as a Ga vacancy VGa, and its concentration increased with increasing Er concentration [Er]. For the sample with [Er]=3.3at.%, the maximum integrated intensity of PL was observed. The VGa concentration was above 1018cm−3 and additional vacancies such as divacancies started to be introduced at this Er concentration. For the sample with higher [Er], the PL intensity decreased, and the mean size of vacancies decreased due to an introduction of precipitates and/or metastable phases.


Journal of Mass Spectrometry | 2008

Kinetic-energy-sensitive mass spectrometry for separation of different ions with the same m/z value

Shigetomo Shiki; Yuki Sato; S. Tomita; Shigeo Hayakawa; Masataka Ohkubo

A double-focusing mass spectrometer (MS) equipped with a superconducting-tunnel-junction (STJ) detector has been applied to measure relative ionization cross-sections for the production of ions that are accompanied by different ion species with the same mass-to-charge (m/z) value. The STJ detector fabricated for this study enables kinetic energy (E) measurement of incoming individual ions at a counting rate of up to approximately 100 k ions/s and an energy resolution (DeltaE/E) of 15%. Both high counting rate and high-energy resolution are necessary to independently determine both m and z and not the m/z value only in ion-counting MS experiments. Ions such as (14)N(2) (2+) and (14)N(+) with the same m/z value can be clearly discriminated using a kinetic-energy-sensitive MS. This fine discrimination capability allows direct determination of relative ionization cross-sections of the homonuclear diatomic ions (14)N(2) (2+)/(14)N(2) (+) and (16)O(2) (2+)/(16)O(2) (+), which are difficult to measure due to the strong interference by the signals of their dissociated atomic ions with noticeably large ionization cross-sections. The new instrument requires no low-abundance heteronuclear diatomic molecules of the forms (14)N(15)N or (16)O(17)O to carry out ionization studies and thus, is expected to be useful in fields such as atmospheric science, interstellar science, or plasma physics.


Applied Physics Letters | 2010

Suppression of concentration quenching of Er-related luminescence in Er-doped GaN

Shaoqiang Chen; Benjamin Dierre; Woong Lee; Takashi Sekiguchi; S. Tomita; Hiroshi Kudo; Katsuhiro Akimoto

Erbium-doped GaN with different doping concentrations were grown by ammonia-source molecular beam epitaxy. The intra-4f-shell transitions related green luminescence were observed by both photoluminescence (PL) and cathodoluminescence (CL) measurements. It was found that concentration quenching of Er-related luminescence was observed in PL measurements while not in CL measurements. The different excitation and relaxation processes are suggested as the cause of the concentration quenching characteristics between PL and CL. The strong Er-related CL intensity in highly doped GaN demonstrates that high energy excitation is a promising approach to suppress the concentration quenching in Er-doped GaN.


International Journal of Mass Spectrometry | 2002

Triply charged bradykinin and gramicidin radical cations: their formation and the selective enhancement of charge-directed cleavage processes

Steen Brøndsted Nielsen; J.U. Andersen; P. Hvelplund; Thomas J. D. Jørgensen; Martin Tang Sørensen; S. Tomita

Abstract We report on the formation and collision-induced dissociation of hydrogen deficient peptide radical cations of the type [M+ n H] ( n +1)+· . These ions are formed from multiply protonated precursors (i.e. [M+ n H] n + ) by collisional electron transfer in high energy collisions with dioxygen. Increasing the charge state of doubly protonated bradykinin ([BK+2H] 2+ ), results in a selective enhancement of b type ions with an especially dominant b 6 ion. Further, we observe a c 4 ion that is ascribed to the radical character of the triply charged ion. The charge reversal spectrum of deprotonated bradykinin [BKH]  provides additional information with the appearance of z type ions, probably formed from the hydrogen-deficient [BKH] +· radical cation which is also observed. The fragmentation pattern of the triply charged gramicidin S radical ([GS+2H] 3+· ) also differs from those of the singly and doubly protonated peptide and reveals structure-indicative acylium ions such as VOLFPVOL and OLFP (O = Ornithine).


Journal of Chemical Physics | 2010

Magic and hot giant fullerenes formed inside ion irradiated weakly bound C60 clusters

Henning Zettergren; H A B Johansson; H. T. Schmidt; Jens Jensen; P. Hvelplund; S. Tomita; Yang Wang; F Martín; Manuel Alcamí; B. Manil; L. Maunoury; B. A. Huber; H. Cederquist

We find that the most stable fullerene isomers, C(70)-C(94), form efficiently in close-to central collisions between keV atomic ions and weakly bound clusters of more than 15 C(60)-molecules. We observe extraordinarily high yields of C(70) and marked preferences for C(78) and C(84). Larger even-size carbon molecules, C(96)-C(180), follow a smooth log-normal (statistical) intensity distribution. Measurements of kinetic energies indicate that C(70)-C(94) mainly are formed by coalescence reactions between small carbon molecules and C(60), while C(n) with n≥96 are due to self-assembly (of small molecules) and shrinking hot giant fullerenes.

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