Zobrazeno 1 - 6
of 6
pro vyhledávání: '"Lars Windhorn"'
Autor:
Karl-Ludwig Kompa, Jake S. Yeston, C. Bradley Moore, Detlev Proch, Marcus Motzkus, Thomas Witte, Werner Fuß, Lars Windhorn
Publikováno v:
The Journal of Chemical Physics. 119:641-645
Gaseous diazomethane (CH2N2) has been irradiated with femtosecond laser pulses tuned to the CNN asymmetric stretch at 2100 cm−1 in the mid-infrared. Laser-induced fluorescence detection of 1CH2 [537 nm, b1B1(0 16 0)←a1A1(0 0 0)] confirms infrared
Autor:
R. de Vivie-Riedle, Karl L. Kompa, Lars Windhorn, Detlev Proch, Thomas Witte, Marcus Motzkus, Thomas Hornung
Publikováno v:
The Journal of Chemical Physics. 118:2021-2024
To achieve large population transfer to high vibrational levels in a selected ground-state mode of a polyatomic molecule [Cr(CO)6], we apply chirped femtosecond mid-infrared laser pulses at 2000 cm−1 to optimize vibrational ladder climbing as an en
Autor:
Lars Windhorn, Thomas Witte, Werner Fuß, Jake S. Yeston, Marcus Motzkus, Detlev Proch, Karl-Ludwig Kompa
Publikováno v:
Chemical Physics Letters. 357:85-90
By focusing a MIR femtosecond laser in a cell containing gas-phase metal carbonyls, the resonant infrared multiphoton dissociation of molecules was observed. Cr(CO)6,Mo(CO)6,W(CO)6, and Fe(CO)5 could easily be dissociated, which requires an excitatio
Publikováno v:
Femtochemistry and Femtobiology.
Publikováno v:
Ultrafast Phenomena XIII ISBN: 9783642639333
A longstanding goal of laser chemistry in general, and of molecular control in particular, is selective scission of chemical bonds by laser light. Early attempts employing nanosecond IR laser pulses were hindered because the excitation time exceeded
Autor:
Karl-Ludwig Kompa, Lars Windhorn, Detlev Proch, Thomas Witte, Jake S. Yeston, Werner Fuß, Marcus Motzkus
Publikováno v:
Ultrafast Phenomena XIII ISBN: 9783642639333
Scopus-Elsevier
Scopus-Elsevier
Efficient and selective preparation of highly excited vibrational states in molecules is a challenging objective in physical chemistry. One means of achieving high ground-state vibrational excitation, possibly even leading to bond scission, was infra