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Structure and spectroscopy of the He2Cl2 van der Waals cluster

Authors :
Nadine Halberstadt
William D. Sands
Kenneth C. Janda
Marta I. Hernández
Source :
Digital.CSIC. Repositorio Institucional del CSIC, instname
Publication Year :
2000
Publisher :
AIP Publishing, 2000.

Abstract

16 p.<br />The rovibrational structure of the He2Cl2 van der Waals cluster in the X and B electronic states is studied by means of full imensional quantum-mechanical calculations. He2Cl2 is the smallest cluster containing helium for which rotationally state-resolved data are available and for which the effects of Bose statistics are important. The He2Cl2 wave functions exhibit quite large amplitude motions, particularly for the He–He bending mode @associated with the angle formed between the two He–~center of mass of Cl2) bonds#. The preferred geometry of the ground van der Waals state is planar, with the He–He axis perpendicular to the Cl2 axis. It is shown that a reduced dimension model for the He–He bending vibration together with a rigid structural model reproduces well the low-lying energy levels of the complex and allows us to assign proper statistical weights to the asymmetric top transitions of the B←X spectra. In particular, the symmetry under He exchange of the rigid rotor levels is shown to depend on the He–He bending evel. The observed excitation spectra are successfully simulated using the proposed model. The effective rigid structure that best reproduces the rotationally excited levels with a rigid rotor analysis is a distorted tetrahedron where the He–He angle is approximately 130°. This difference from the 180° most probable configuration is due to the complex dependence of the moments of inertia on the internal degrees of freedom for such a floppy molecule. Therefore, structural information obtained from observed spectra of this or similar clusters should be carefully analyzed to avoid reaching misleading conclusions. Fragmentation rates for He2Cl2(B,v510– 13) are, for the first time, extracted from experimental data, confirming that the dissociation process is mainly sequential. © 2000 American Institute of Physics.<br />This work has been supported by the D.G.I.C.Y.T. Grant No. PB95-0071 (Spain), CNRS (France), NSF ~USA!, and the Spanish–French cooperation program No. HF1999-0132.

Details

ISSN :
10897690 and 00219606
Volume :
113
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
The Journal of Chemical Physics
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....38ba02f36baf3effd4de1dd6028ea846