Fundamental Investigation of Intense Laser-Molecule Interactions


       The interaction of intense, short pulse lasers with polyatomic molecules presents a new area of research for the chemical physicist.  The laser pulse has sufficient intensity that essentially any molecule will be excited with up to 50 eV of energy, but the pulse duration is short enough that the energy need not channel into the nuclear modes resulting in substantial decomposition.  Using longer duration laser pulses of similar intensities results in decomposition to ionized atomic fragments.  We demonstrated in 1995 that in fact intact ionization can be obtained for large polyatomic molecules at intensities above 1013 W cm-2 with short duration laser pulses.  To begin to understand the strong field interaction we have performed a number of experiments measuring the photoelectron spectra, the mass spectra and the ion kinetic energy distributions for many series of molecules.  A key theoretical advance for understanding the measurment was the development of the structure-based model by this group in the late 1990's.  More information regarding our fundamental investigation can be found in the following papers:

1: Robert J. Levis and Merrick J. DeWitt,  "Photoexcitation, Ionization and Dissociation of Molecules Using Intense Near-Infrared Radiation of Femtosecond Duration ," J. Phys. Chem. A 103(33): 6493-6507, 1999

2: Alexei N. Markevitch, Noel P. Moore and Robert J. Levis, "The Influence of Molecular Structure on Strong Field Energy Coupling and Partitioning,"Chem. Phys., 267(1-3), 131-140, 2001

3: Noel P. Moore and Robert J. Levis, "The Strong Field Photoelectron Spectroscopy of Acetylene: Evidence for Short-Lived 4p Gerade States Via Electric Field-Induced REMPI" J. Chem. Phys. 112(3): 1316-1320, 2000

4: M.J. DeWitt and R.J. Levis, "Observing the Transition From Multiphoton-Dominated to Field-Mediated Ionization Process for Polyatomic Molecules in Intense Laser Fields,"  Phys. Rev. Lett. 81(23): 5101-5104 DEC 7, 1998