Event Details

A glimpse into the world of ICD and ETMD

  • 2024-02-14
  • Prof. Lorenz S Cederbaum, Affiliation of the Speaker : Institute of Physical Chemistry, University of Heidelberg, Germany.

How does a microscopic system like an atom or a small molecule get rid of the excess electronic (or vibrational) energy it has acquired, for instance, by absorbing a photon or by impact with an ion or electron? If this microscopic system is isolated, the issue has been much investigated, and the answer is more or less known. But what happens if our system has neighbors as is usually the case in nature or in the laboratory? A mechanism of energy transfer named ICD (Interatomic/Intermolecular Coulombic Decay) has been theoretically predicted and verified by many exciting experiments now. This mechanism seems to prevail “everywhere" from the extreme quantum system of the He dimer to water, to systems in cavity, and even to quantum dots. The transfer is ultrafast and typically dominates other relaxation pathways. ?ICD is often accompanied by ETMD (Electron Transfer Mediated Decay). As charge transfer is usually much slower than energy transfer, ICD dominates. However, ETMD can be widely operative when our microscopic system itself does not possess excess energy, i.e., when ICD is inactive. The energy needed is created by the ETMD itself. In this talk, ICD and ETMD are introduced and discussed. Examples and arguments are presented which make clear that the processes in question play a substantial role in nature and in the laboratory.

Prof. Lorenz S Cederbaum studied physics at the University of Munich and obtained his Ph.D. under Georg Hohlneicher. He was professor at the University of Freiburg before becoming professor for theoretical chemistry at the University of Heidelberg in 1979. Prof. Cederbaum is a member of the International Academy of Quantum Molecular Science and the Academy of Sciences Leopoldina. ?His body of research comprises more than 800 works from a wide range of topics across physics and chemistry, including ?many-body theory of atoms, molecules and clusters and molecular quantum dynamics.