Effect of molecular constitution and conformation on positron binding and annihilation in alkanes
Abstract
The model-potential approach previously developed by the authors to study positron interactions with molecules is used to calculate the positron binding energy for n-alkanes (CnH2n+2) and the corresponding cycloalkanes (CnH2n). For n-alkanes, the dependence of the binding energy on the conformation of the molecule is investigated, with more compact structures showing greater binding energies. As a result, thermally averaged binding energies for larger alkanes (n 9) show a strong temperature dependence in the range of 100-600 K. This suggests that positron resonant annihilation can be used as a probe of rotational (trans-gauche) isomerization of n-alkanes. In particular, the presence of different conformers leads to shifts and broadening of vibrational Feshbach resonances in the annihilation rate, as observed with a trap-based low-energy positron beam.
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