DENSITY-DEPENDENCE OF THE COLLISIONAL DEACTIVATION OF HIGHLY VIBRATIONALLY EXCITED CYCLOHEPTATRIENE IN COMPRESSED GASES, SUPERCRITICAL FLUIDS, AND LIQUIDS

Citation
J. Benzler et al., DENSITY-DEPENDENCE OF THE COLLISIONAL DEACTIVATION OF HIGHLY VIBRATIONALLY EXCITED CYCLOHEPTATRIENE IN COMPRESSED GASES, SUPERCRITICAL FLUIDS, AND LIQUIDS, The Journal of chemical physics, 106(12), 1997, pp. 4992-5005
Citations number
61
Categorie Soggetti
Physics, Atomic, Molecular & Chemical
ISSN journal
00219606
Volume
106
Issue
12
Year of publication
1997
Pages
4992 - 5005
Database
ISI
SICI code
0021-9606(1997)106:12<4992:DOTCDO>2.0.ZU;2-1
Abstract
The collisional deactivation of highly vibrationally excited 1,3,5-cyc loheptatriene (CHT) in compressed gases, supercritical fluids, and in liquids was studied. Different bath gases and solvents (alkanes, alcoh ols, CO2, CHF3, nitrogen) and pressures up to 200 bars were used. This way, measurements covered the complete gas-liquid transition regime. CHT with a vibrational energy of 41 000 cm(-1) was generated by laser excitation into the S-1 state and internal conversion to the S-0 groun d state. From picosecond UV absorption measurements, energy-loss profi les were obtained taking into account the density dependent absorption spectra, which were measured separately. A monoexponential decrease o f the internal energy in CHT was observed under all studied conditions . In gases at pressures up to 40 bars, the relaxation rates increase l inearly with the density and the energies transferred per collision, [ Delta E], agree with those values obtained in earlier low pressure gas phase experiments. At higher densities, the relaxation rates deviate markedly from predictions based on simple scaling assumptions with app ropriate collision frequencies. The deactivation in liquids is slower by a factor of 3-5 than expected from such isolated binary collision ( IBC) models. These results are rationalized using a model that takes i nto account the finite lifetime of collision complexes. (C) 1997 Ameri can Institute of Physics.