Vibrational relaxation of CH3I in the gas phase and in solution

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Issue Date
2004-03-30Author
Elles, Christopher G.
Cox, M. Jocelyn
Crim, F. Fleming
Publisher
American Institute of Physics
Type
Article
Article Version
Scholarly/refereed, publisher version
Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
Transient electronic absorption measurements reveal the vibrational relaxation dynamics of CH(3)I following excitation of the C–H stretch overtone in the gas phase and in liquid solutions. The isolated molecule relaxes through two stages of intramolecular vibrational relaxation (IVR), a fast component that occurs in a few picoseconds and a slow component that takes place in about 400 ps. In contrast, a single 5–7 ps component of IVR precedes intermolecular energy transfer (IET) to the solvent, which dissipates energy from the molecule in 50 ps, 44 ps, and 16 ps for 1 M solutions of CH(3)I in CCl(4), CDCl(3), and (CD(3))(2)CO, respectively. The vibrational state structure suggests a model for the relaxation dynamics in which a fast component of IVR populates the states that are most strongly coupled to the initially excited C–H stretch overtone, regardless of the environment, and the remaining, weakly coupled states result in a secondary relaxation only in the absence of IET.
Description
This is the publisher's version, also available electronically from http://scitation.aip.org/content/aip/journal/jcp/120/15/10.1063/1.1676292.
ISSN
0021-9606Collections
Citation
Elles, Christopher G.; Cox, M. Jocelyn; Crim, F. Fleming. (2004). "Vibrational relaxation of CH3I in the gas phase and in solution." The Journal of Chemical Physics, 120:6973. http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/1.1676292
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