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Vibrational spectroscopy of the water-nitrate complex in the O-H stretching region

Authors :
Nadja Heine
Knut R. Asmis
Anne B. McCoy
Risshu Bergmann
Eric G. Kratz
Daniel P. Schofield
Kenneth D. Jordan
Source :
The journal of physical chemistry. A. 118(37)
Publication Year :
2014

Abstract

The vibrational spectroscopy of the nitrate-water isotopologues is studied in the O-H and O-D stretching regions using temperature-dependent infrared multiple photon dissociation spectroscopy combined with calculations of the anharmonic spectra. At a temperature of 15 K a series of discrete peaks is observed in the IRMPD spectra of NO3(-)·H2O, NO3(-)·HDO, and NO3(-)·D2O. This structure is considerably more complex than predicted by harmonic calculations. A signal is only observed in the hydrogen-bonded O-H (O-D) stretching region, characteristic of a double hydrogen-bond donor binding motif. With increasing temperature, the peaks broaden, leading to a quasi-continuous absorption from 3150 to 3600 cm(-1) (2300-2700 cm(-1)) for NO3(-)·H2O (NO3(-)·D2O) and, above 100 K, an additional band in the free O-H (O-D) stretching region, suggesting the population of complexes containing only a single hydrogen bond at higher internal energies. Vibrational configuration interaction calculations confirm that much of the structure observed in the IRMPD spectra derives from progressions in the water rocking mode resulting from strong cubic coupling between the O-H (O-D) stretch and water rock degrees of freedom. The spectra of both NO3(-)·H2O and NO3(-)·D2O display a strong peak that does not derive from the water rock progression but results instead from a Fermi resonance between the O-H (O-D) stretch and H-O-H (D-O-D) bend overtone. Additional insight into the nature of the O-H (O-D) stretch and water rocking coupling in these complexes is provided by an effective Hamiltonian that allows for the cubic coupling between the O-H stretch and water rock degrees of freedom.

Details

ISSN :
15205215 and 23002700
Volume :
118
Issue :
37
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
The journal of physical chemistry. A
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....d526229f7e65b0a55e2c748dedc2cf78