Many-body theory of positron binding to polyatomic molecules

Jaroslav Hofierka, Brian Cunningham, Charlie M. Rawlins, Charles H. Patterson, Dermot G. Green*

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

40 Citations (Scopus)
84 Downloads (Pure)

Abstract

Positron binding to molecules is key to extremely enhanced positron annihilation and positron-based molecular spectroscopy1. Although positron binding energies have been measured for about 90 polyatomic molecules1–6, an accurate ab initio theoretical description of positron–molecule binding has remained elusive. Of the molecules studied experimentally, ab initio calculations exist for only six; these calculations agree with experiments on polar molecules to at best 25 per cent accuracy and fail to predict binding in nonpolar molecules. The theoretical challenge stems from the need to accurately describe the strong many-body correlations including polarization of the electron cloud, screening of the electron–positron Coulomb interaction and the unique process of virtual-positronium formation (in which a molecular electron temporarily tunnels to the positron)1. Here we develop a many-body theory of positron–molecule interactions that achieves excellent agreement with experiment (to within 1 per cent in cases) and predicts binding in formamide and nucleobases. Our framework quantitatively captures the role of many-body correlations and shows their crucial effect on enhancing binding in polar molecules, enabling binding in nonpolar molecules, and increasing annihilation rates by 2 to 3 orders of magnitude. Our many-body approach can be extended to positron scattering and annihilation γ-ray spectra in molecules and condensed matter, to provide the fundamental insight and predictive capability required to improve materials science diagnostics7, 8, develop antimatter-based technologies (including positron traps, beams and positron emission tomography)8–10, and understand positrons in the Galaxy.
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)688-693
JournalNature
Volume606
Issue number7915
Early online date22 Jun 2022
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 23 Jun 2022

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