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  2. Charge exchange - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Charge_exchange

    Charge-exchange spectroscopy (abbreviated CES or CXS) is a technique commonly used in plasma diagnostics to analyze high-temperature controlled fusion plasmas. In fusion plasmas, the light elements tend to become fully ionized during operation, which makes it challenging to diagnose their properties using conventional optical diagnostics.

  3. Gas-phase ion chemistry - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gas-phase_ion_chemistry

    Charge-exchange ionization (also called charge-transfer ionization) is a gas phase reaction between an ion and a neutral species A + + B → A + B + {\displaystyle A^{+}+B\to A+B^{+}} in which the charge of the ion is transferred to the neutral.

  4. Chemical ionization - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chemical_ionization

    Careful control over the selection of reagent gases and the consideration toward the difference between the resonance energy of the reagent gas radical cation and the ionization energy of the analyte can be used to control fragmentation. [7] The reactions for charge-exchange chemical ionization are as follows.

  5. Dihydrogen cation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dihydrogen_cation

    The equation describes the motion of a fictitious particle of mass equal to the reduced mass of the two nuclei, in the potential E tot (R)+V L (R), where the second term is the centrifugal potential due to rotation with angular momentum described by the quantum number L. The eigenenergies of this Schrödinger equation are the total energies of ...

  6. Chemi-ionization - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chemi-ionization

    A certain amount of energy, which may be large enough, is required to remove an electron from an atom or a molecule in its ground state. [12] [13] In chemi-ionization processes, the energy consumed by the ionization must be stored in atoms or molecules in a form of potencial energy or can be obtained from an accompanying exothermic chemical change (for example, from a formation of a new ...

  7. Ion - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ion

    The energy required to detach an electron in its lowest energy state from an atom or molecule of a gas with less net electric charge is called the ionization potential, or ionization energy. The nth ionization energy of an atom is the energy required to detach its nth electron after the first n − 1 electrons have already been detached.

  8. Ionic bonding - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ionic_bonding

    The charge of the resulting ions is a major factor in the strength of ionic bonding, e.g. a salt C + A − is held together by electrostatic forces roughly four times weaker than C 2+ A 2− according to Coulomb's law, where C and A represent a generic cation and anion respectively. The sizes of the ions and the particular packing of the ...

  9. Ion source - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ion_source

    Electron capture ionization (ECI) is the ionization of a gas phase atom or molecule by attachment of an electron to create an ion of the form A −•.The reaction is + where the M over the arrow denotes that to conserve energy and momentum a third body is required (the molecularity of the reaction is three).