In atom probe tomography of molecular
organic materials, field
ionization of either entire molecules or molecular fragments can occur,
but the mechanism governing this behavior was not previously understood.
This work explains when a doubly ionized small molecule organic material
is expected to undergo fragmentation. We find that multiple detection
events arising from post-ionization fragmentation of a parent molecular
dication into two daughter ions is well explained by the free energy
and geometries of the molecules computed using density functional
theory. Of the systems studied, exergonic free energies for formation
of the daughter ions, smaller activation energies for dissociation,
and increases in bond length are all found to be quantitative predictors
for ion fragmentation. This work expands the applicability of atom
probe tomography to organic materials by increasing the fundamental
understanding of processes occurring during this analysis technique