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Ultrafast X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy at European XFEL offers a new way to watch reactions, atom by atom
When molecules fall apart, their electric charge doesn’t stay put—it rearranges as bonds stretch and break. An international team of scientists has now tracked these ultrafast changes in the small molecule fluoromethane (CH₃F). It was the first time that the Small Quantum Systems (SQS) instrument at European XFEL could deliver detailed insights into transient states during chemical reactions. These intermediate states, that only exist temporarily while the reaction is ongoing, are often the key drivers of chemistry and therefore crucial to understand. Over the long term, that kind of insight can support progress in areas such as atmospheric science (where sunlight-driven reactions and fragmentation pathways shape air chemistry), as well as the study of complex molecular systems including biomolecules and proteins, where local excitation and charge transfer can trigger structural change.
In the experiment, the researchers first triggered the reaction with an optical laser pulse. Next, they used the X-ray laser pulses that the European XFEL produces, to eject an electron from the core of either the fluorine or the carbon atom in the molecule. They measured the electron’s kinetic energy, which reveals how strongly it was bound inside the atom. That binding energy is extremely sensitive to the local electrical environment, producing so-called “chemical shifts” that act like a fingerprint of the charge distribution surrounding the atom from which the electron has been ejected. With an overall time resolution of about 35 femtoseconds (trillions of times shorter than the blink of an eye), the team could follow changes separately at two atomic sites, carbon and fluorine, inside the same molecule. The method is called time-resolved X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (tr XPS).
“Core-level photoelectron spectroscopy tells us what is happening at a specific atom,” says Michael Meyer, lead scientist at the Small Quantum Systems (SQS) instrument at European XFEL. “By probing carbon and fluorine independently, we can see when different fragments appear and how the charge distribution evolves during dissociation.”
Two competing break-up pathways
The measurements reveal that after ionization through the loss of an electron, fluoromethane can dissociate through different channels on very different timescales. One channel involves rapid cleavage of the C–F bond, forming a CH₃⁺ fragment and a departing fluorine atom. A second channel is slower and involves C–H bond cleavage, producing CH₂F⁺ and a neutral hydrogen atom. “Knowing not only the starting molecule and the final fragments, but also the short-lived intermediate states, is key,” says Daniel Rivas, former instrument scientist, now guest scientist at SQS and first author of the research paper published today in Physical Review X. “Those transient species can be highly reactive and may be the real drivers of chemical change.”
From measurement to mechanism
A central challenge in ultrafast XPS is interpretation: the experiment directly measures shifting spectral lines, but identifying which transient species causes which line and what that implies about charge motion, requires theory. To connect the observed chemical shifts to the molecular dynamics, the team used advanced simulations. They also compared these results with a simpler “partial-charge” (electrostatic) model that estimates chemical shifts from the evolving distribution of partial charges on the atoms. “Explicit core-hole calculations can be very complex and computationally expensive,” says Antonio Picón (Instituto de Ciencia de Materiales de Madrid, CSIC), one of the project’s principal investigators. “Here we show that a much simpler partial-charge model can reproduce the key chemical shifts with very good agreement, which could make it far easier to analyze ultrafast XPS data in larger, more complex systems.”
The study also highlights that chemical shifts can be influenced not only by the atom being probed, but also by charges located surprisingly far away, for example as fragments separate and move out of each other’s electric field. This long-range sensitivity is one reason the approach is promising for tracking charge-driven dynamics in larger molecular structures.
Transient products drive reactions
Many reactions are governed not just by the final products, but by transient states that exist for only femtoseconds to picoseconds. By making those intermediates experimentally accessible, time-resolved XPS can help decipher “what drives what” during chemical change. Improved understanding of highly reactive intermediates is a foundation for learning how to better manage and control photochemical reactions, for example by choosing excitation conditions that favor or suppress specific reaction pathways.
“For us at SQS, this was a first time-resolved experiment in this configuration using the optical laser,” Meyer adds. “It served as a proof of concept, showing that we can run stable pump–probe measurements and extract rich, site-resolved dynamics from the spectra.”
Daniel Rivas
daniel.rivas@xfel.eu
Antonio Picón
antonio.picon@csic.es
+34 917165991
https://doi.org/10.1103/y6dt-1sfw
https://www.xfel.eu/news_and_events/news/index_eng.html?openDirectAnchor=2974&am...
Illustration of the pump–probe experiment on fluoromethane (CH₃F)
Quelle: European XFEL
Copyright: European XFEL
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