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Quantum-State-Resolved CO<sub>2</sub> Scattering Dynamics at the Gas−Liquid Interface: Dependence on Incident Angle
44
Citations
66
References
2007
Year
Quantum DynamicEngineeringGas−liquid InterfaceMolecular DynamicsMolecular KineticsMolecular SpectroscopyQuantum ScienceEnergy Transfer DynamicsTrapping DesorptionPhysicsIncident AnglePhysical ChemistryQuantum ChemistrySolid-state PhysicInterfacial PhenomenonNatural SciencesSpectroscopyApplied PhysicsCondensed Matter PhysicsInterfacial StudyScattered Co2 Flux
Energy transfer dynamics at the gas-liquid interface have been probed with a supersonic molecular beam of CO2 and a clean perfluorinated-liquid surface in vacuum. High-resolution infrared spectroscopy measures both the rovibrational state populations and the translational distributions for the scattered CO2 flux. The present study investigates collision dynamics as a function of incident angle (thetainc = 0 degrees, 30 degrees, 45 degrees, and 60 degrees), where column-integrated quantum state populations are detected along the specular-scattering direction (i.e., thetascat approximately thetainc). Internal state rovibrational and Doppler translational distributions in the scattered CO2 yield clear evidence for nonstatistical behavior, providing quantum-state-resolved support for microscopic branching of the gas-liquid collision dynamics into multiple channels. Specifically, the data are remarkably well described by a two-temperature model, which can be associated with both a trapping desorption (TD) component emerging at the surface temperature (Trot approximately TS) and an impulsive scattering (IS) component appearing at hyperthermal energies (Trot > TS). The branching ratio between the TD and IS channels is found to depend strongly on thetainc, with the IS component growing dramatically with increasingly steeper angle of incidence.
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