Download Document

Survey
yes no Was this document useful for you?
   Thank you for your participation!

* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project

Document related concepts
no text concepts found
Transcript
Vibrational cooling of large molecules
in supersonic expansions: The case of
C60 and pyrene
Bradley M. Gibson and Jacob T. Stewart, Department
of Chemistry, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
Benjamin J. McCall, Departments of Chemistry and Astronomy,
University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
Why study C60?
Symmetry
Figure from:
Astrochemical Relevance
J. Cami, J. Bernard-Salas, E. Peeters, and S.E. Malek. Science 329, 1180 (Sep. 2010)
{2}
How do we look for C60?
β€’ High- temperatureC(~850
K) Pressure
oven
Vapor
60
β€’ Cooling via continuous
supersonic expansion
β€’ CW-CRDS detection, ~1185 cm-1
Figures from: B. Brumfield. Development of a quantum cascade laser based spectrometer for high-resolution spectroscopy of
gas phase C60. UIUC, 2011.
{3}
What do we expect to see?
β€’ Branch heads possible
S/N=
𝑛𝑧 𝑓𝑆 β€² 𝐿𝑗𝑒𝑑
βˆ†π‘£(πœŽπ‘πΈπ΄ )
βˆ†B
β€’ Pinhole nozzle: ~2
β€’ Slit nozzle: ~40
Figure from:
J. T. Stewart, B. Brumfield, B. M. Gibson, B. J. McCall. In preparation.
{4}
What did we actually see?
Estimated:
Observed:
(NEA ~0.6 ppm)
Figures from: J. T. Stewart, B. Brumfield, B. M. Gibson, B. J. McCall. In preparation.
{5}
Why didn’t we see anything?
High-Temperature
Ground State Oven
Population
Alignment
1.0
Fraction in Ground State
0.8
0.6
0.4
0.2
0.0
0
Figure from:
50
100
200
150
Vibrational Temperature (K)
250
300
B. Brumfield. Development of a quantum cascade laser based spectrometer for high-resolution spectroscopy of
gas phase C60. UIUC, 2011.
{6}
Do other molecules cool efficiently?
Pyrene
β€’ Oven temp ~430 K
β€’ Estimated from absorption depth
β€’ Tvib 60-90 K
D2O
β€’ Oven temp ~800 K
β€’ Estimated from hot band
β€’ Tvib > 1000 K
{7}
How does vibrational cooling work?
V-T Transfer
v=2
v=1
kBT
kBT
v=0
Translational Energy: ↑
Vibrational Energy: ↓
See also:
M. E. Sanz, M. C. McCarthy and P. Thaddeus. J. Chem. Phys. 122, 194319 (2005)
{8}
How does vibrational cooling work?
V-T Transfer
v=2
kBT
v=1
kBT
v=0
Translational Energy: ↑
Vibrational Energy: ↓
See also:
M. E. Sanz, M. C. McCarthy and P. Thaddeus. J. Chem. Phys. 122, 194319 (2005)
{9}
How does vibrational cooling work?
V-T Transfer
-4
10
-6
Fraction in Ground State
(After Cooling)
10
-8
10
-10
10
-12
10
-14
10
-16
10
-18
10
-20
10
300
400
500
600
Initial Temperature (K)
700
800
{10}
How does vibrational cooling work?
Intramode Relaxation
v=2
v=1
v=0
See also:
M. E. Sanz, M. C. McCarthy and P. Thaddeus. J. Chem. Phys. 122, 194319 (2005)
{11}
How does vibrational cooling work?
Intermode Relaxation
Bend
See also:
Stretch
M. E. Sanz, M. C. McCarthy and P. Thaddeus. J. Chem. Phys. 122, 194319 (2005)
{12}
How does vibrational cooling work?
Cluster Predissociation
Bend
See also:
Intermolecular
Stretch
G. Ewing. Chem. Phys. 29, 253 (Apr. 1978)
{13}
How can we produce colder vapor?
Laser Ablation
β€’ Initial temperature >1900K
Laser Desorption
β€’ Initial temperature uncertain
β€’ Ground state detectable by R2PI
See also:
E. E. B. Campbell, I. V. Hertel, Ch. Kusch, R. Mitzner, and B. Winter. Synth. Mat. 77, 173 (1996)
R. E. Haufler, L-S. Wang, L. P. F. Chibante, C. Jin, J. Conceicao, Y. Chai, and R. E. Smalley. Chem. Phys. Lett. 179, 449
(1991)
{14}
How can we produce colder vapor?
Supercritical Fluid Expansion
β€’ Initial temperature solvent dependent (~450 K)
β€’ CO2 w/ toluene co-solvent – aids cooling
β€’ Low vapor flux (~1013 molecules s-1)
See also:
C. H. Sin, M. R. Linford, and S. R. Goates. Anal. Chem. 64, 233 (1992)
{15}
Conclusions
β€’
β€’
β€’
β€’
C60 signal not yet observed
Lack of signal likely due to poor vibrational cooling
Efficient cooling highly dependent upon initial temperature
New vaporization technique required
{16}
Acknowledgements
β€’ McCall Group
β€’ Brian Brumfield
β€’ Claire Gmachl
{17}
Related documents