Steering Proton Migration in Hydrocarbons Using Intense Few-Cycle Laser Fields

Abstract

Proton migration is a ubiquitous process in chemical reactions related to biology, combustion, and catalysis. Thus, the ability to manipulate the movement of nuclei with tailored light within a hydrocarbon molecule holds promise for far-reaching applications. Here, we demonstrate the steering of hydrogen migration in simple hydrocarbons, namely, acetylene and allene, using waveform-controlled, few-cycle laser pulses. The rearrangement dynamics is monitored using coincident 3D momentum imaging spectroscopy and described with a widely applicable quantum-dynamical model. Our observations reveal that the underlying control mechanism is due to the manipulation of the phases in a vibrational wave packet by the intense off-resonant laser field. © 2016 American Physical Society.

Description

Citation: Kübel, M., Siemering, R., Burger, C., Kling, N. G., Li, H., Alnaser, A. S., . . . Kling, M. F. (2016). Steering Proton Migration in Hydrocarbons Using Intense Few-Cycle Laser Fields. Physical Review Letters, 116(19). doi:10.1103/PhysRevLett.116.193001

Keywords

Laser Optics, Molecules, 3-D Momentum Imaging Spectroscopy, Control Mechanism, Few-Cycle Laser Pulse, Hydrocarbon Molecules

Citation