We report quantal calculations of elastic differential and momentum transfer cross sections for the scattering of electrons by H2O at low and intermediate collision energies, i.e., from 2 to 20 eV. The fixed-nuclei approximation (FNA) was employed and a single-center expanded (SCE) wave function was used to represent the molecular target. The well-known divergence in the forward direction was corrected via Born closure formulas (see the text) and a parameter-free model, previously tested for methane targets, was used to describe exchange and polarization effects. The present results can be used to adequately describe angular distributions even at very small angles and can be extended beyond the largest angles that have been experimentally measured. The behavior of momentum-transfer cross sections as a function of energy, and the comparison of our results with other static-exchange (SE) calculations, which use an entirely different approach, are presented and discussed. © 1987 American Institute of Physics.

Low-energy electron scattering from water molecules: A study of angular distributions

Scialla S.
1987-01-01

Abstract

We report quantal calculations of elastic differential and momentum transfer cross sections for the scattering of electrons by H2O at low and intermediate collision energies, i.e., from 2 to 20 eV. The fixed-nuclei approximation (FNA) was employed and a single-center expanded (SCE) wave function was used to represent the molecular target. The well-known divergence in the forward direction was corrected via Born closure formulas (see the text) and a parameter-free model, previously tested for methane targets, was used to describe exchange and polarization effects. The present results can be used to adequately describe angular distributions even at very small angles and can be extended beyond the largest angles that have been experimentally measured. The behavior of momentum-transfer cross sections as a function of energy, and the comparison of our results with other static-exchange (SE) calculations, which use an entirely different approach, are presented and discussed. © 1987 American Institute of Physics.
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12610/71284
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