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1.
J Chem Phys ; 128(10): 104309, 2008 Mar 14.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-18345890

ABSTRACT

Anion photoelectron spectra of the O(2)(-) . arene and O(4)(-) . arene complexes with p-xylene and p-difluorobenzene are presented and analyzed with the aid of calculations on the anions and corresponding neutrals. Relative to the adiabatic electron affinity of O(2), the O(2)(-) . arene spectra are blueshifted by 0.75-1 eV. Solvation energy alone does not account for this shift, and it is proposed that a repulsive portion of the neutral potential energy surface is accessed in the detachment, resulting in dissociative photodetachment. O(2)(-) is found to interact more strongly with the p-difluorobenzene than the p-xylene. The binding motif involves the O(2)(-) in plane with the arene, interacting via electron donation along nearby C-H bonds. A peak found at 4.36(2) eV in the photoelectron spectrum of O(2)(-) . p-difluorobenzene (p-DFB) is tentatively attributed to the charge transfer state, O(2)(-) . p-DFB(+). Spectra of O(4)(-) . arene complexes show less blueshift in electron binding energy relative to the spectrum of bare O(4)(-), which itself undergoes dissociative photodetachment. The striking similarity between the profiles of the O(4)(-) . arene complexes with the O(4)(-) spectrum suggests that the O(4)(-) molecule remains intact upon complex formation, and delocalization of the charge across the O(4)(-) molecule results in similar structures for the anion and neutral complexes.

2.
J Chem Phys ; 123(9): 94306, 2005 Sep 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16164344

ABSTRACT

Rotationally resolved fluorescence excitation spectra of the S(1)<--S(0) origin band of 7-azaindole [1H-pyrrolo(2,3-b)pyridine] and its argon atom van der Waals complex have been recorded and assigned. The derived rotational constants give information about the geometries of the two molecules in both electronic states. The equilibrium position of the argon atom in the azaindole complex is considerably different from its position in the corresponding indole complex. Furthermore, the argon atom moves when the UV photon is absorbed. There are significant differences in the intermolecular potential energy surfaces in the two electronic states. A large, vibration-state-dependent rotation of the S(1)<--S(0) electronic transition moment vector of 7-azaindole relative to that of indole suggests that these differences have their origin in S(1)/S(2) electronic state mixing in the isolated molecule, a mixing that is enhanced by nitrogen substitution in the six-membered ring.

3.
J Chem Phys ; 122(17): 174301, 2005 May 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-15910026

ABSTRACT

Reported here are measurements of the magnitude and orientation of the induced dipole moment that is produced when an indole molecule in its ground S(0) and electronically excited S(1) states is polarized by the attachment of a hydrogen bonded water molecule in the gas phase complex indole-H(2)O. For the complex, we find the permanent dipole moment values mu(IW)(S(0)) = 4.4 D and mu(IW)(S(1)) = 4.0 D, values that are substantially different from calculated values based on vector sums of the dipole moments of the component parts. From this result, we derive the induced dipole moment values mu(I) (*)(S(0)) = 0.7 D and mu(I) (*)(S(1)) = 0.5 D. The orientation of the induced moment also is significantly different in the two electronic states. These results are quantitatively reproduced by a purely electrostatic calculation based on ab initio values of multipole moments.

4.
J Phys Chem A ; 109(5): 767-72, 2005 Feb 10.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16838945

ABSTRACT

The rotationally resolved S(1) <-- S(0) electronic spectrum of the water complex of p-difluorobenzene (pDFB) has been observed in the collision-free environment of a molecular beam. Analyses of these data show that water forms a planar sigma-bonded complex with pDFB via two points of attachment, a stronger F---H-O hydrogen bond and weaker H---O-H hydrogen bond, involving an ortho hydrogen atom of the ring. Despite the apparent rigidity of this structure, the water molecule also is observed to move within the complex, leading to a splitting of the spectrum into two tunneling subbands. Analyses of these data show that this motion is a combined inversion-internal rotation of the attached water, analogous to the "acceptor-switching" motion in the water dimer. The barriers to this motion are significantly different in the two electronic states owing to changes in the relative strengths of the two hydrogen bonds that hold the complex together.

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