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Spin-Forbidden Carbon-Carbon Bond Formation in Vibrationally Excited α-CO.

Jessalyn A DeVineArnab ChoudhuryJascha A LauDirk SchwarzerAlec M Wodtke
Published in: The journal of physical chemistry. A (2022)
Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy of laser-irradiated cryogenic crystals shows that vibrational excitation of CO leads to the production of equal amounts of CO 2 and C 3 O 2 . The reaction mechanism is explored using electronic structure calculations, demonstrating that the lowest-energy pathway involves a spin-forbidden reaction of (CO) 2 yielding C( 3 P) + CO 2 . C( 3 P) then undergoes barrierless recombination with two other CO molecules forming C 3 O 2 . Calculated intersystem crossing rates support the spin-forbidden mechanism, showing subpicosecond spin-flipping time scales for a (CO) 2 geometry that is energetically consistent with states accessed through vibrational energy pooling. This spin-flip occurs with an estimated ∼4% efficiency; on the singlet surface, (CO) 2 reconverts back to CO monomers, releasing heat which induces CO desorption. The discovery that vibrational excitation of condensed-phase CO leads to spin-forbidden C-C bond formation may be important to the development of accurate models of interstellar chemistry.
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