Leak-out spectroscopy as alternative method to rare-gas tagging for the Renner-Teller perturbed HCCH + and DCCD + ions.
Kim SteenbakkersTom van BoxtelGerrit C GroenenboomOskar AsvanyBritta RedlichStephan SchlemmerSandra BrünkenPublished in: Physical chemistry chemical physics : PCCP (2024)
Infrared messenger-tagging predissociation action spectroscopy (IRPD) is a well-established technique to record vibrational spectra of reactive molecular ions. One of its major drawbacks is that the spectrum of the messenger-ion complex is taken instead of that of the bare ion. In particular for small open-shell species, such as the Renner-Teller (RT) affected HCCH + and DCCD + , the attachment of the tag may have a significant impact on the spectral features. Here we present the application of the novel leak-out spectroscopy (LOS) as a tag-free method to record the cis -bending of the HCCH + (∼700 cm -1 ) and DCCD + cations (∼520 cm -1 ), using a cryogenic ion trap end user station at the FELIX laboratory. We demonstrate that the obtained LOS spectrum is equivalent to a previously recorded laser-induced reactions (LIR) spectrum of HCCH + . The bending modes are the energetically lowest-lying vibrational modes targeted with LOS so far, showing its potential as a universal broadband spectroscopic technique. Furthermore, we have investigated the effect of the rare gas attachment by recording the vibrational spectra of Ne- and Ar-tagged HCCH + . We found that the Ne-attachment led to a shift in band positions and change in relative intensities, while the Ar-attachment even led to a complete quenching of the RT splitting, showing the importance of using a tag-free method for RT affected systems. The results are interpreted with the help of high-level ab initio calculations in combination with an effective Hamiltonian approach.
Keyphrases
- density functional theory
- molecular dynamics simulations
- single molecule
- molecular dynamics
- high resolution
- energy transfer
- quantum dots
- molecular docking
- room temperature
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- minimally invasive
- raman spectroscopy
- magnetic resonance imaging
- magnetic resonance
- cancer therapy
- mass spectrometry
- computed tomography