Concepedia

Abstract

Infrared spectra of He(N)-CO(2) clusters with N up to about 20 have been studied in the region of the CO(2) nu(3) fundamental band ( approximately 2350 cm(-1)) using a tunable diode laser spectrometer and pulsed supersonic jet source with cooled (>-150 degrees C) pinhole or slit nozzles and high backing pressures (<40 atm). Compared to previous studies of He(N)-OCS and -N(2)O clusters, the higher symmetry of CO(2) results in simpler spectra but less information content. Discrete rotation-vibration transitions have been assigned for N=3-17, and their analysis yields the variation of the vibrational band origin and B rotational constant over this size range. The band origin variation is similar to He(N)-OCS, with an initial blueshift up to N=5, followed by a monotonic redshift, consistent with a model where the first five He atoms fill a ring around the equator of the molecule, forcing subsequent He atom density to locate closer to the ends. The B value initially drops as expected for a normal molecule, reaching a minimum for N=5. Its subsequent rise for N=6 to 11 can be interpreted as the transition from a normal (though floppy) molecule to a quantum solvation regime, where the CO(2) molecule starts to rotate separately from the He atoms. For N>13, the B value becomes approximately constant with a value about 17% larger than that measured in much larger helium nanodroplets.

References

YearCitations

2000

654

1998

609

2002

191

2002

157

1987

155

2001

141

2001

112

2004

108

1994

94

1989

88

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