Etude à basse température dans l'infrarouge proche du dimère (NO)2

1984 ◽  
Vol 62 (4) ◽  
pp. 322-329 ◽  
Author(s):  
V. Menoux ◽  
R. Le Doucen ◽  
C. Haeusler ◽  
J. C. Deroche

The spectrum of the dimer (NO)2 in the gas phase has been studied in the near infrared at temperatures between 118 and 138 K. More specifically, the measure of absorption intensity of the ν4 and ν1 + ν4 bands has yielded the heat of formation of the dimer, −2.25 kcal/mol at 128 K, and revealed the influence of the low vibrational modes on this measure. The observation of the ν4 – ν6, difference band has yielded the wave number value of the ν6, fundamental band, forbidden in the infrared. The rotational constants of the vibrationally excited state were found to be larger than the ground state rotational constants, this result being very unusual.

2006 ◽  
Vol 17 (10) ◽  
pp. 1391-1402 ◽  
Author(s):  
EMİNE DENİZ ÇALIŞIR ◽  
ŞAKİR ERKOÇ

Cyfluthrin is a synthetic cyano-containing pyrethroid insecticide that has both contact and stomach poison action. It is a nonsystemic chemical used to control cutworms, ants, silverfish, cockroaches, mosquitoes, tobacco budworm and many others. Its primary agricultural uses have been for control of chewing and sucking insects on crops such as cotton, turf, ornamentals, hops, cereal, corn, deciduous fruit, peanuts, potatoes, and other vegetables. Cyfluthrin is also used in public health situations and for structural pest control. The structural, vibrational, electronic and QSAR properties of the cyfluthrin molecule in gas phase have been investigated theoretically by performing molecular mechanics method by using MM+ force field, and semi-empirical molecular orbital AM1 and PM3 calculations. The geometry of the molecule has been optimized, infrared spectrum (vibrational modes and intensities) and the electronic properties of the molecule have been calculated in its ground state. According to PM3 calculation, heat of formation of cyfluthrin molecule is about -48.58 kcal/mol (exothermic), which shows that this molecule thermodynamically be stable. The HOMO energy level for this molecule is found to be -9.701 eV and the LUMO energy level is -0.660 eV giving rise to a gap of 9.041 eV, which also indicates that cyfluthrin is thermodynamically stable.


2019 ◽  
Author(s):  
Matthew M. Brister ◽  
Carlos Crespo-Hernández

<p></p><p> Damage to RNA from ultraviolet radiation induce chemical modifications to the nucleobases. Unraveling the excited states involved in these reactions is essential, but investigations aimed at understanding the electronic-energy relaxation pathways of the RNA nucleotide uridine 5’-monophosphate (UMP) have not received enough attention. In this Letter, the excited-state dynamics of UMP is investigated in aqueous solution. Excitation at 267 nm results in a trifurcation event that leads to the simultaneous population of the vibrationally-excited ground state, a longlived <sup>1</sup>n<sub>O</sub>π* state, and a receiver triplet state within 200 fs. The receiver state internally convert to the long-lived <sup>3</sup>ππ* state in an ultrafast time scale. The results elucidate the electronic relaxation pathways and clarify earlier transient absorption experiments performed for uracil derivatives in solution. This mechanistic information is important because long-lived nπ* and ππ* excited states of both singlet and triplet multiplicities are thought to lead to the formation of harmful photoproducts.</p><p></p>


1985 ◽  
Vol 40 (9) ◽  
pp. 913-919
Author(s):  
Juan Carlos López ◽  
José L. Alonso

Abstract The rotational transitions of 3,4-dihydro-1,2-pyran in the ground state and six vibrationally excited states have been assigned. The rotational constants for the ground state (A = 5198.1847(24), B = 4747.8716(24) and C = 2710.9161(24) have been derived by fitting μa, μb and μc-type transitions. The dipole moment was determined from Stark displacement measurements to be 1.400(8) D with its principal axis components |μa| =1.240(2), |μb| = 0.588(10) and |μc| = 0.278(8) D. A model calculation to reproduce the ground state rotational constants indicates that the data are consistent with a twisted ring conformation. The average intensity ratio gives vibrational separations between the ground and excited states of the ring-bending and ring-twisting modes of ~ 178 and ~ 277 cm-1 respectively.


1983 ◽  
Vol 37 (6) ◽  
pp. 545-552 ◽  
Author(s):  
John Kishman ◽  
Eric Barish ◽  
Ralph Allen

A predominantly blue “active nitrogen” afterglow was generated in pure flowing nitrogen or in air by using a dielectric discharge at pressures from 1 to 20 Torr. The afterglow contains triplet state molecules and vibrationally excited ground state molecules. These species are produced directly by electron impact without the formation and recombination of nitrogen atoms. The most intense emission is the N2 second positive band system. The N2 first positive and N2+ first negative systems are also observed. The spectral and electrical properties of this discharge are discussed in order to establish guidelines for the analytical use of the afterglow for chemiluminescence reactions. The metastatic nitrogen efficiently transfers its energy to atomic and molecular species which are introduced into the gas phase and these excited species emit characteristic radiation. The effects of electrothermal atomization of Zn and the introduction of gaseous species (e.g., NO) on the afterglow are described.


1981 ◽  
Vol 36 (7) ◽  
pp. 768-773 ◽  
Author(s):  
Shatha F. Al-Siaidi ◽  
Ibrahim T. Ibrahim ◽  

Abstract The conjugative interaction of the C=N bond with the cyclopropylring is studied using UV-spectrophotometric technique. The observed small bathochromic shift in the n-n* bands, relative to the spectra of similar compounds but with no cyclopropylring, is attributed to the interaction of the internal Walsh MO with the nonbonded MO of the Nitrogen atom (Zlint-n interaction) in the bisected conformation of the molecule. The observed bathochromic shifts of the 71-71* bands are explained in terms of the A-n interaction. The gas phase spectra of the azomethine derivatives show vibronic structuring of the band which when analyzed yeld wave number differences be­ tween the successive vibronic peaks, of the magnitude 720—860 cm-1. They are attributed to to the wave number differences between the successive C—N=C deformed ion levels in the excited state. I n te r a c tio n o f th e C = N B o n d w ith th e C y c lo p r o p y l R in g


1987 ◽  
Vol 42 (2) ◽  
pp. 197-206 ◽  
Author(s):  
M. Meyer ◽  
U. Andresen ◽  
H. Dreizler

The microwave spectrum of 2-chloropyridine, 2-Cl(C5H4N), has been studied to determine the 35Cl, 37Cl and 14N nuclear quadrupole coupling constants. The results are discussed within a simple MO theory. We propose an approximate r0-structure under certain assumptions. In addition to the ground state we observed one vibrationally excited state of both chlorine isotopic species of 2-chloropyridine.


1990 ◽  
Vol 45 (9-10) ◽  
pp. 1117-1130
Author(s):  
Otto L. Stiefvater

Abstract The pure rotational spectra of molecules in 21 vibrationally excited states of the heterocyclic compound furazan (C2H2N2O) have been detected and studied by DRM microwave spectroscopy. Rotational parameters are reported for the 12 fundamental levels below 1500 cm-1 , and the contri-butions from 10 vibrational modes to the effective rotational constants and to the inertia defect of furazan are calculated.


1975 ◽  
Vol 30 (4) ◽  
pp. 541-548 ◽  
Author(s):  
P. J. Mjöberg ◽  
W. M. Ralowski ◽  
S. O. Ljunggren

Abstract The microwave spectra of the two 79Br and 81Br isotopic species of 2-bromothiophene have been measured in the region 18000-40000 MHz.For both isotopic species, the rotational constants of the ground state and one vibrationally excited state were determined, as well as the centrifugal distortion coefficients of the ground state. The ground state rotational constants in MHz are as follows:C4H332S79Br C4H332S81BrA = 5403.432 ±0.111 5403.563 ±0.095,B = 1139.0689±0.0010 1126.5173±0.0011 C = 940.5142±0.0018 931.9315±0.0009.In order to perform a second-order perturbation treatment of the quadrupole interaction, the matrix elements of products of direction cosines in terms of the symmetric top wave functions have been derived. By the first-and second-order perturbation analysis of the hyperfine splittings of the rotational lines, the nuclear quadrupole coupling constants have been determined. The values in MHz areXaa = 592.7 ±1.5 493.7 ±1.5,Xbb = -295.3 ±0.6 -245.6 ±0.7, Xcc = -297.4 ±1.6 -248.1 ±1.6,Xab = 80 ±9 64±8 ,in the principal axes system of the molecule.


2003 ◽  
Vol 68 (9) ◽  
pp. 1572-1578 ◽  
Author(s):  
B. Michela Giuliano ◽  
Walther Caminati

The rotational spectra of the ground state and of one vibrational satellite of 2,3-benzofuran have been measured by millimetre-wave absorption free jet spectroscopy in the frequency range 60-78 GHz. The value of the inertial defect (-0.072 uÅ2) shows the molecule to be planar. The shifts of the rotational constants in going from the ground to the excited state indicate that the observed vibrational satellite does not belong to the two lowest energy motions, the butterfly and 1,3-ring-twisting, which undergo relaxation upon the supersonic expansion.


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