Singly and doubly charged chromium-water ion-molecule complexes are produced by laser vaporization in a pulsed-nozzle cluster source. These species are detected and mass-selected in a specially designed time-of-flight mass spectrometer. Vibrational spectroscopy is measured for these complexes in the O-H stretching region using infrared photodissociation spectroscopy and the method of rare gas atom predissociation. Infrared excitation is not able to break the ion-water bonds in these systems, but it leads to elimination of argon, providing an efficient mechanism for detecting the spectrum. The O-H stretches for both singly and doubly charged complexes are shifted to frequencies lower than those for the free water molecule, and the intensity of the symmetric stretch band is strongly enhanced relative to the asymmetric stretch. Partially resolved rotational structure for both complexes shows that the H-O-H bond angle is greater than it is in the free water molecule. These polarization-induced effects are enhanced in the doubly charged ion relative to its singly charged analog.
The internal energy or effective temperature of cluster ions has become an important issue in characterizing the structures observed in these species. This report considers the role played by the method of ion preparation (laser vaporization-supersonic expansion versus ion impact-evaporative cooling) in governing the internal energy of a specific species, Li(+)(H(2)O)Ar. Vibrational predissociation spectroscopy of the O-H stretch modes revealed rotational features, which were used to characterize the structure and effective rotational temperature of the cluster ion. In addition, the impact of the lithium ion on the H(2)O molecule was analyzed in terms of the vibrational frequency shifts, relative IR intensities, and H(2)O geometry.
Copper-water ion-molecule complexes with attached argon atoms, Cu(+)(H(2)O)Ar(2), are produced in a supersonic molecular beam by pulsed laser vaporization. These systems are mass-selected in a reflectron time-of-flight spectrometer and studied with infrared photodissociation spectroscopy. The vibrational spectra for these complexes are characteristic of many cation-water systems, exhibiting symmetric and asymmetric O-H stretch fundamentals, and weaker features at higher frequency that have been tentatively assigned to combination bands. Using isotopically substituted spectra and model potential calculations, we are able to assign the combination bands to a water torsional vibration (frustrated rotation) in combination with the asymmetric stretch fundamental. This combination band assignment is likely to apply to IR spectra of many cation-water complexes.
Singly and doubly charged manganese-water cations, and their mixed complexes with attached argon atoms, are produced by laser vaporization in a pulsed nozzle source. Complexes of the form Mn(+)(H(2)O)Ar(n) (n = 1-4) and Mn(2+)(H(2)O)Ar(4) are studied via mass-selected infrared photodissociation spectroscopy, detected in the mass channels corresponding to the elimination of argon. Sharp resonances are detected for all complexes in the region of the symmetric and asymmetric stretch vibrations of water. With the guidance of density functional theory computations, specific vibrational band resonances are assigned to complexes having different argon attachment configurations. In the small singly charged complexes, argon adds first to the metal ion site and later in larger clusters to the hydrogens of water. The doubly charged complex has argon only on the metal ion. Vibrations in all of these complexes are shifted to lower frequencies than those of the free water molecule. These shifts are greater when argon is attached to hydrogen and also greater for the dication compared to the singly charged species. Cation binding also causes the IR intensities for water vibrations to be much greater than those of the free water molecule, and the relative intensities are greater for the symmetric stretch than the asymmetric stretch. This latter effect is also enhanced for the dication complex.
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