Infrared–ultraviolet double resonance studies of benzene molecules in a supersonic beam
- 1 May 1988
- journal article
- research article
- Published by AIP Publishing in The Journal of Chemical Physics
- Vol. 88 (9) , 5362-5376
- https://doi.org/10.1063/1.454574
Abstract
We have used IR excitation to selectively create populations in admixtures of the zeroth-order states comprising the ∼3000 cm−1 ‘‘C–H stretching Fermi triad’’ of benzene. UV spectra of the 260 nm Ã(1B2u)←X̃(1A1g) transition in the IR-excited molecules show several new bands, which we have assigned. Final states in the UV transitions are some vibrational levels which have not been detected before, allowing us to find several excited-state vibrational frequencies. We have determined ν′3 =1327±3 cm−1, ν19 =1405±3 cm−1, and ν′20 =3084±5 cm−1. Also, vibrational structure which was unresolved in IR spectra of the ‘‘Fermi triad’’ was resolved in the UV double resonance spectra, confirming that the C–H stretching admixture is really a tetrad. The 3048, 3079, and 3101 cm−1 states had formerly been given the labels ν″20, ν″8+ν″19, and ν″1+ν″6+ν″19, respectively. Actually, the middle level most nearly resembles ν″1+ν″6+ν″19, and the 3101 cm−1 level is strongly mixed with ν″3+ν″6+ν″15. As predicted by molecular orbital theory, excited-state C–H bending and stretching frequencies are not very different from those in the ground state. Furthermore, we suggest that the four C–H stretching frequencies increase uniformly by ∼20 cm−1 in the excited state; reexamination of the Atkinson and Parmenter 260 nm Ã←X̃ spectrum leads us to reassign ν2 from 3130 to ∼3093 cm−1, which is 19 cm−1 above ν″2. There is a Fermi resonance between the ν6+ν′20 level and another level ∼13 cm−1 lower in energy; the strength of the perturbation is ∼18 cm−1. Possibilities for the perturbing vibrational state are ν6+ν′8+ν14 and ν′6+ν13.Keywords
This publication has 47 references indexed in Scilit:
- Local modes of benzene and benzene dimer, studied by infrared–ultraviolet double resonance in a supersonic beamThe Journal of Chemical Physics, 1988
- Ionization-detected Raman studies of the 1600 cm−1 Fermi dyad of benzeneThe Journal of Chemical Physics, 1985
- The ν13 fundamental band of benzeneCanadian Journal of Physics, 1983
- The 1B2u←←1A l g two-photon spectra of several isotopes of benzene by supersonic beam–multiphoton ionization spectroscopyThe Journal of Chemical Physics, 1982
- The totally symmetric rotation‐vibrational Raman bands of benzeneJournal of Raman Spectroscopy, 1979
- High resolution rotation–vibration Raman spectra of benzene. I. The totally symmetric bands of C6H6Canadian Journal of Physics, 1978
- Two-photon spectroscopy in the gas phase: Assignments of molecular transitions in benzeneThe Journal of Chemical Physics, 1977
- Torsional force constants and the benzene out-of-plane force fieldSpectrochimica Acta Part A: Molecular Spectroscopy, 1971
- Normal coordinates for the planar vibrations of benzeneSpectrochimica Acta Part A: Molecular Spectroscopy, 1968
- The force field, vibration frequencies, normal co-ordinates, infra-red and Raman intensities for benzenePhilosophical Transactions of the Royal Society of London. Series A, Mathematical and Physical Sciences, 1955