Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
5375603 | Chemical Physics | 2009 | 6 Pages |
Abstract
We present experimental measurements of the vibrational relaxation of CO2 (1 20 1) by argon, at ambient temperature (295 ± 2 K). The CO2 molecules were directly excited to the (1 20 1, J = 14) ro-vibrational state by a tunable laser radiation at â¼2 μm. Time-resolved infrared fluorescence technique was used to study the collisional relaxation process. The bimolecular deactivation rate constant of CO2 (1 20 1) by argon was found to be (825 ± 43 Torrâ1 sâ1) while the self-deactivation by CO2 (0 00 0) was determined to be (3357 ± 135 Torrâ1 sâ1). The radiative life-time of the vibrational combination band (1 20 1), Ï[CO2 (1 20 1)], was found to be (5.55 ± 0.27) μs. Modern angular momentum theory was used to explain values of the deactivation rate measured. It is concluded that the presence of the (0 80 0) state acts like an angular momentum sink leading to a fast deactivation rate of the CO2 (1 20 1) by argon.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering
Chemistry
Physical and Theoretical Chemistry
Authors
Z.T. Alwahabi, J. Zetterberg, Z.S. Li, M. Aldén,