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Rotational Motion and Nuclear Spin Interconversion of H2O Encapsulated in C60 Appearing in the Low-Temperature Heat Capacity.

Hal SuzukiMotohiro NakanoYoshifumi HashikawaYasujiro Murata
Published in: The journal of physical chemistry letters (2019)
The heat capacity of H2O encapsulated in fullerene C60 is determined for the first time at temperatures between 0.6 and 200 K. The water molecule in H2O@C60 undergoes quantum rotation at low temperature, and the ortho-H2O and para-H2O isomers are identified by labeling the rotational energy levels with the nuclear spin states. A rounded heat capacity maximum is observed at ∼2 K after rapid cooling due to splitting of the rotational J KaKc = 101 ground state of ortho-H2O. This anomalous feature decreases in magnitude over time, reflecting the conversion of ortho-H2O to para-H2O. Time-dependent heat capacity measurements at constant temperature reveal three nuclear spin conversion processes: a thermally activated transition with Ea ≈ 3.2 meV and two temperature-independent tunneling processes with time constants of τ1 ≈ 1.5 h and τ2 ≈ 11 h.
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