Lifetimes of the IrBr62- and IrCl62- gas-phase ions were measured in an electrostatic ion storage ring its 3.3 +/- 0.1 s and 3.1 +/- 0.1 s, respectively. The lifetimes indicate that the dianions are not subject to spontaneous decay under ambient conditions, since they are associated with decay resulting solely from high-energy collisions with residual gas (similar to 5 x 10(-11) Torr) that is present in the ring. To further investigate the high-energy collisional decay dynamics, IrBr62- and IrCl62- were subjected to high-energy collision induced dissociation measurements in an accelerator mass spectrometer (ion translational energy in laboratory frame = 100 keV). A number of daughter ions were formed following the high-energy collisions (e.g., IrCl62- produced IrCl6-, IrCl5, IrCl4-, IrCl3 and Cl). The presence of the intact monoanion (i.e., IrCl6-) indicates that electron detachment is a prominent decay process, in contrast to low-energy collisional excitation where IrCl5 and Cl- are produced via ionic fragmentation. The predominance of electron detachment occurring is a result of high-energy collisions was further illustrated by charge-reversal measurements where cationic daughter fragments were observed, consistent with triple electron detachment. This measurement indicates that high-energy collisional activation of dianions should represent a general approach for studying triple electron detachment of molecular anions. (c) 2005 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.