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Time-of-Flight study of molecular beams extracted from the ISOLDE RFQ cooler and buncher

Molecular beams injected into the ISOLDE Radio-Frequency Quadrupole cooler and buncher (RFQcb), ISCOOL, have been studied under varying conditions using a new Time-of-Flight (ToF) detector. When a beam of molecules is injected into the RFQcb and interacts with the buffer gas, collisional dissociatio...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Ringvall Moberg, A., Warren, S., Muñoz Pequeño, C., Cruikshank, J., Giles, T., Hanstorp, D.
Publicado: 2020
Acceso en línea:https://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.nimb.2019.03.014
http://cds.cern.ch/record/2674386
Descripción
Sumario:Molecular beams injected into the ISOLDE Radio-Frequency Quadrupole cooler and buncher (RFQcb), ISCOOL, have been studied under varying conditions using a new Time-of-Flight (ToF) detector. When a beam of molecules is injected into the RFQcb and interacts with the buffer gas, collisional dissociation processes may occur. In this study, two different beams of molecules, CO$^{+}$ and N$_{2}^{+}$, were separately injected into ISCOOL, and two different buffer gases (pure helium or a 90:10 mixture of helium and neon) were used. The radio-frequency of the RFQcb was varied as the molecules, along with the fragments from the dissociation processes, were extracted from ISCOOL and studied using the new Time-of-Flight detector. The main finding of this work is that the rates for molecular dissociation within ISCOOL were very small for both CO$^{+}$ and N$_{2}^{+}$, with the largest rates found for CO$^{+}$.