Local versus hyperspherical modes of water and formaldehyde: Effect of molecular complexity on mode-selective structures and dynamics
- 1 March 1992
- journal article
- Published by AIP Publishing in The Journal of Chemical Physics
- Vol. 96 (5) , 3569-3584
- https://doi.org/10.1063/1.461911
Abstract
Effects of molecular complexity on mode-selective phenomena are studied for models of water and formaldehyde. Here, complexity is measured by the numbers of vibrational degrees of freedom which interact in the model systems, including both OH stretches and the bending motion for H2O and both the CH and the CO stretches for CH2O. Neglect (i.e., decoupling or ‘‘freezing’’) of the bending vibration in H2O, or the CO stretch in CH2O, yields simpler model systems which serve as references for the more complex original ones. The mode-selective phenomena that are compared for these systems include structural and dynamical effects of highly excited local and hyperspherical modes. The methods employed include expansions of vibrational states in terms of simple, i.e., Morse or harmonic-oscillaton basis functions for the individual stretches and bends, as well as fast-Fourier-transform propagations of the representative wave packets: The validity of these techniques is discussed in detail, depending on the properties of the selective states considered. The most important result is that increasing molecular complexity does not necessarily destroy all mode selectivity. However, the conservation of mode selectivity depends on the system, and on the property considered. Thus, for H2O, the structures of local modes are conserved, whereas very highly excited hyperspherical ones are modified when the bend is switched on. In contrast, for CH2O both local and hyperspherical structures are conserved, and the ratio of rates for fast local mode vs slow hyperspherical mode decay remains very large (≫100:1) when the CO stretch is coupled to the CH2 fragment. In addition, the lifetimes of local modes decrease as the complexity of the model system increases from CH2 to CH2O, indicating inverse intramolecular relaxation of vibrational energy. Extrapolation of these results suggests that mode selectivity may extend from small to larger systems.Keywords
This publication has 118 references indexed in Scilit:
- Vibrational energy level statistics of small moleculesThe Journal of Chemical Physics, 1991
- Quantum exact three-dimensional study of the photodissociation of the ozone moleculeThe Journal of Chemical Physics, 1990
- Fermi resonances and local modes in water, hydrogen sulfide, and hydrogen selenideThe Journal of Chemical Physics, 1988
- Near infrared spectroscopic observation of the linear and cyclic isomers of the hydrogen cyanide trimerThe Journal of Chemical Physics, 1988
- A vibrational variational hyperspherical approach to the stretching states of triatomic ABA moleculesThe Journal of Physical Chemistry, 1986
- Understanding Molecular Dynamics Quantum-State by Quantum-StateScience, 1985
- Specific rate constants k(E,J) for the unimolecular dissociations of formaldehyde and formaldehyde-d2The Journal of Physical Chemistry, 1984
- Relaxation dynamics of photoexcited benzene–rare gas van der Waals complexesThe Journal of Chemical Physics, 1984
- Three-dimensional quantum dynamics of H2O and HOD photodissociationThe Journal of Chemical Physics, 1982
- Local mode behavior: The Morse oscillator modelSpectrochimica Acta Part A: Molecular Spectroscopy, 1981