
For the first time, a research team led by Markus Koch from the Institute of Experimental Physics at Graz University of Technology (TU Graz) has tracked in real time how individual atoms combine to form a cluster and which processes are involved.
To achieve this, the researchers first isolated magnesium atoms using superfluid helium and then used a laser pulse to trigger the formation process. The researchers were able to observe this cluster formation and the involved energy transfer between individual atoms with a temporal resolution in the femtosecond range.
They published their findings in the journal Communications Chemistry.
‘Nano-refrigerator’ brings atoms into the starting position
“Normally, magnesium atoms instantaneously form tight bonds, which means that there is no defined starting configuration for observation of the bond-formation processes,” explains Koch.
The researchers have solved this problem, which often arises when observing chemical processes in real time, by conducting experiments with superfluid helium droplets. These droplets act like ultra-cold “nano-fridges” that isolate the individual magnesium atoms from each other at extremely low temperatures of 0.4 Kelvin (= -272.75 degrees Celsius or 0.4 degrees Celsius above absolute zero) at a distance of a millionth of a millimeter.

“This configuration allowed us to initiate cluster formation with a laser pulse and track it precisely in real time,” explains Michael Stadlhofer, who carried out the experiments as part of his doctoral thesis.
The researchers observed the processes triggered by the laser pulse using photoelectron and photoion spectroscopy. While the magnesium atoms combined to form a cluster, they were ionized with a second laser pulse.
Koch and his colleagues were able to reconstruct the processes involved in detail on the basis of the ions formed and electrons released.
Atoms pool their energy
A key discovery here is energy pooling. As they bind to each other, several magnesium atoms transfer the excitation energy received from the first laser pulse to a single atom in the cluster, so that it reaches a much higher energy state. This is the first time that energy pooling has been demonstrated with time resolution.
“We hope that this atomic separation inside helium droplets will also work for a larger class of elements and thus become a generally applicable method in basic research,” says Koch.
“In addition, the findings on energy pooling could be relevant for energy-transfer processes in various areas of application, for example in photomedicine or in the utilization of solar energy.”
More information:
Michael Stadlhofer et al, Real-time tracking of energy flow in cluster formation, Communications Chemistry (2025). DOI: 10.1038/s42004-025-01563-6
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Graz University of Technology
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How chemical bonds are formed: Physicists observe energy flow in real time (2025, June 17)
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