A study of the role of vibration–vibration exchange on the collisional deactivation of vibrationally excited singlet molecular oxygen
- 15 March 1975
- journal article
- research article
- Published by AIP Publishing in The Journal of Chemical Physics
- Vol. 62 (6) , 2235-2239
- https://doi.org/10.1063/1.430746
Abstract
A study of the role of vibration−vibration (V−V) exchange on the collisional deactivation of laser excited O2(1Δg) (v′ = 1) has been carried out. It is apparent that such exchange can be important only if deactivation of O2(2Δg) (v′ = 0) occurs via intersystem crossing (E−V) to the O2(3Σ−g) (v = 5) state. A theoretical study of such a deactivation mechanism has been carried out (II), yielding results similar in form to those obtained previously (I), in which only vibration−translation (V−T) and electronic−translation deactivation (E−T) were considered. In either case two time constants appear, one characterizing the electronic E−T or E−V process and the other the V−T process. In Case I, the V−T deactivation occurs in the 1Δg state, while in Case II it occurs in the 3Σ−g ground electronic state. Theory suggests that since the vibrational spacing in the 1Δg state is slightly less than in the 3Σ−g state, V−T deactivation should occur at a more rapid rate in the former. Analysis of experimental data on the effect of He on the vibrational phase shift of laser excited O2(1Δg) (v′ = 1) yields a vibrational time constant significantly smaller than that obtained from earlier measurements under the same experimental conditions for O2(3Σ−g). From this it is concluded that O2(1Δg) does not readily communicate vibration to the ground electronic state and that vibrational deactivation in this state must occur by a V−T process.Keywords
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