• Skip to Management
  • Skip to Main menu
  • Skip to Page content
CHIC Logo
  • WISTA
  • WISTA.Plan
  • WISTA.Service
WISTA direkt
Search
  • de
  • en
  • CHIC Logo
  • News / Events
    • Overview
    • CHIC on LinkedIn
  • Company Directory
  • Working Environments
  • WISTA
  • WISTA.Plan
  • WISTA.Service
WISTA direkt

News / Events

  • Overview
  • CHIC on LinkedIn
  • Charlottenburg
  • News / Events
05. March 2021

Terahertz waves from electrons oscillating in liquid water

Researchers at Max-Born-Institute have observed radiation in the terahertz range which is initiated during the electron localization process

Fig. 1. Cartoon of an oscillating polaron in liquid water © MBI
Fig. 1. Cartoon of an oscillating polaron in liquid water © MBI

Ionization of water molecules by light generates free electrons in liquid water. After generation, the so-called solvated electron is formed, a localized electron surrounded by a shell of water molecules. In the ultrafast localization process, the electron and its water shell display strong oscillations, giving rise to terahertz emission for tens of picoseconds.

Ionization of atoms and molecules by light is a basic physical process generating a negatively charged free electron and a positively charged parent ion. If one ionizes liquid water, the free electron undergoes a sequence of ultrafast processes by which it loses energy and eventually  localizes at a new site in the liquid, surrounded by a water shell [Fig. 1]. The localization process includes a reorientation of water molecules at the new site, a so-called solvation process, in order to minimize the electric interaction energy between the electron and the water dipole moments. The localized electron obeys the laws of quantum mechanics and displays discrete energy levels. Electron localization occurs in the subpicosecond time range (1 ps = 10-12 s = a millionth of a millionth of a second) and is followed by dissipation of excess energy into the liquid.

Researchers at the Max-Born-Institute have now observed radiation in the terahertz range (1 THz = 1012 Hz = 1012 oscillations per second) which is initiated during the electron localization process. As they report in the recent issue of Physical Review Letters, Vol. 126, 097401 (2021), the THz emission can persist for up to 40 ps, i.e., much longer than the localization process itself. It displays a frequency between 0.2 and 1.5 THz, depending on the electron concentration in the liquid.

The emitted THz waves originate from oscillations of the solvated electrons and their water shells. The oscillation frequency is determined by the local electric field the liquid environment exerts on this quantum system. Adding hydrated electrons to the liquid changes the local field and, thus, induces a change of oscillation frequency with electron concentration. Most surprising is the comparably weak damping of the oscillations which points to a weak interaction with the fluctuating larger environment in the liquid and a longitudinal character of the underlying electron and water motions.

The new experimental results are accounted for by a theoretical model based on a polaron picture as explained in Fig. 1. The polaron is an excitation which includes coupled motions of the electron and the water shell at low frequency. Due to such internal oscillations of charge, the hydrated electron radiates a THz wave. The weak damping of this wave allows for a manipulation of the emission, e.g., by interaction of the hydrated electron with a sequence of ultrashort light pulses.

Fig. 1. Cartoon of an oscillating polaron in liquid water: (a) Schematic network of hydrogen-bonded water molecules of neat water (red: oxygen atoms, green: hydrogen atoms). (b) Electron solvated in water (yellow-red cloud). The electron attracts the hydrogen atoms of water molecules, thereby polarizing its environment of water molecules and generating a self-consistent potential trap for the electron. The electron solvated this way represents an elementary quantum system (c) A possible elementary excitation is a combined motion of the electron and the water shell, a so-called polaron. The polaron can be connected with an oscillation of the size of the quantum system (panels (b) and (c)), changing the strength of the overall electric polarization originating from the water molecules. (d) The oscillating electric polarization emits an electric field Eosc(τ) which is plotted as a function of time τ and represents the quantity observed experimentally.

Publication:

Terahertz Polaron Oscillations of Electrons Solvated in Liquid Water
A. Ghalgaoui, B. P. Fingerhut, K. Reimann, T. Elsaesser, M. Woerner,
Phys. Rev. Lett. 126, 097401 (2021). (Editor's suggestion). DOI: 10.1103/PhysRevLett.126.097401
 

Contact:

Max Born Institute for Nonlinear Optics and Short Pulse Spectroscopy

Dr. Michael Woerner
Email Michael.Woerner(at)mbi-berlin.de
Phone +49 30 6392-1470

Dr. Ahmed Ghalgaoui
Email Ahmed.Ghalgaoui(at)mbi-berlin.de
Phone +49 30 6392-1282
Phone +49 30 6392-1471

Dr. Benjamin Fingerhut
Email Benjamin.Fingerhut(at)mbi-berlin.de
Phone +49 30 6392-1404

Prof. Dr. Klaus Reimann
Email Klaus.Reimann(at)mbi-berlin.de
Phone +49 30 6392-1476

Prof. Dr. Thomas Elsaesser
Email Thomas.Elsaesser(at)mbi-berlin.de
Phone +49 30 6392-1400

www.mbi-berlin.de

 

Press release MBI, 3 March 2021

Photonics / Optics Research

Related News

  • MBI researchers manipulate the propagation of light in everyday liquids using ultrashort light pulses

    Discovery enables new applications for optical measurement technology and communication with light
  • Fig. 1: Two-dimensional infrared spectra © MBI

    Magnesium ions slow down water dynamics on short length scales

    Experiments by MBI, FU Berlin and LMU Munich show the influence of ions on the dynamics of surrounding water molecules
  • Figures THz waveforms © MBI

    Intense monocycle terahertz pulses from shifting electrons in quantum structures

    Scientists from MBI and PDI demonstrated a novel concept for generating ultrashort THz waveforms by tailoring electronic currents in a compact optically driven quantum device
  • Fig. 1 MBI Ghalgaoui © MBI

    Strong fields and ultrafast motions

    Experiments at the Max Born Institute demonstrate how to generate and steer electrons in liquid water
  • Figure 1 © MBI

    Water makes the proton shake

    MBI Scientists describe ultrafast motions and fleeting geometries in proton hydration
  • Anregung Li-Atom

    The view into the crystal

    MBI scientists recorded ultrasmall atom motions with ultrashort x-ray pulses
  • Fig. 1: The mid-infrared spectrum of the Zundel cation shows the marked contributions of OH stretching and bending vibrations, and the significant broadband Zundel continuum

    Fluctuating liquid structure induces ultrabroad infrared absorption

    MBI scienstists investigate hydrated protons on ultrafast time scales

Related Institutions

  • Max-Born-Institut für Nichtlineare Optik und Kurzzeitspektroskopie im Forschungsverbund Berlin e.V. (MBI)
  • LinkedInshare0
  • Facebookshare0
  • WhatsAppshare0
  • E-Mail
  • © WISTA Management GmbH
  • Legal Notice
  • Privacy Policy
  • Social Media
  • Contact
Zukunftsort Charlottenburg Logo