Login / Signup

Observation of an isomerizing double-well quantum system in the condensed phase.

Jascha A LauArnab ChoudhuryChen LiDirk SchwarzerVarun B VermaAlec M Wodtke
Published in: Science (New York, N.Y.) (2020)
Molecular isomerization fundamentally involves quantum states bound within a potential energy function with multiple minima. For isolated gas-phase molecules, eigenstates well above the isomerization saddle points have been characterized. However, to observe the quantum nature of isomerization, systems in which transitions between the eigenstates occur-such as condensed-phase systems-must be studied. Efforts to resolve quantum states with spectroscopic tools are typically unsuccessful for such systems. An exception is CO adsorbed on NaCl(100), which is bound with the well-known OC-Na+ structure. We observe an unexpected upside-down isomer (CO-Na+) produced by infrared laser excitation and obtain well-resolved infrared fluorescence spectra from highly energetic vibrational states of both orientational isomers. This distinctive condensed-phase system is ideally suited to spectroscopic investigations of the quantum nature of isomerization.
Keyphrases
  • energy transfer
  • molecular dynamics
  • density functional theory
  • molecular docking
  • quantum dots
  • monte carlo
  • high resolution