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Tilmann D. Märk

Researcher at University of Innsbruck

Publications -  668
Citations -  19726

Tilmann D. Märk is an academic researcher from University of Innsbruck. The author has contributed to research in topics: Ion & Electron ionization. The author has an hindex of 64, co-authored 662 publications receiving 18712 citations. Previous affiliations of Tilmann D. Märk include University of New Hampshire & Claude Bernard University Lyon 1.

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Submersion of potassium clusters in helium nanodroplets

TL;DR: In this article, it was shown that small alkali clusters do not submerge in liquid helium nanodroplets but instead survive predominantly in high spin states that reside on the surface of the nanodrogroplet.
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Proton‐transfer‐reaction mass spectrometry for the study of the production of volatile compounds by bakery yeast starters

TL;DR: Proton-transfer-reaction mass spectrometry (PTR-MS), coupled to a time-of-flight mass analyzer, was employed, for the first time, to measure the volatile fractions of dough and bread, and to monitor Saccharomyces cerevisiae volatile production in a fermented food matrix.
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Proton transfer reaction mass spectrometry for the sensitive and rapid real-time detection of solid high explosives in air and water

TL;DR: The ability to identify even minute amounts of threat compounds, such as explosives, particularly within a complex chemical environment, is vital to the fight against crime and terrorism.
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Kinetic Energy Release Distributions and Evaporation Energies for Metastable Fullerene Ions

TL;DR: In this paper, the generalized Maxwell distribution of the Gspann parameter γ was derived for the spontaneous decay of singly, doubly and triply charged fullerene ions.
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Sequential Penning Ionization: Harvesting Energy with Ions

TL;DR: The observation of the ejection of electrons caused by collisions of excited atoms with ions, rather than neutrals, leading to the production of doubly charged ions points toward a novel ionization process where doubly charge ions are produced by sequential Penning ionization.