In nine polyatomic molecules, we have studied the intramolecular redistribution of vibrational energy from chromophore C═O group excited by a resonant femtosecond IR laser radiation at a wavelength of ∼5 μm. All experiments have been performed in the gas phase using the IR-IR pump-probe technique in combination with the spectral analysis of the probe radiation. For molecules with one C═O end group, characteristic times of intramolecular vibrational redistribution (IVR) lie in the range between 2.4 and 20 ps and correlate with the density of four-frequency Fermi resonances. The IVR times in metal carbonyl molecules are anomalously long, being ∼1.0 ns for Fe(CO)5 and ∼1.5 ns for Cr(CO)6. In the CH3(C═O)OC2H5 and H2CCH(C═O)OC2H5 molecules, it has been observed that there are two characteristic IVR times, which differ by an order of magnitude from each other; this was interpreted in terms of the developed model of "accumulating states". For the ICF2COF molecule, it has been revealed that the IVR time decreases with increasing level of the vibrational excitation of the C═O bond of the molecule.
The
intramolecular dynamics of vibrational levels (up to v = 5) of the ν1 mode in the (CF3)2CCO molecule that is induced by a multiphoton selective
excitation of this mode by resonant femtosecond IR radiation has been
studied. The times of intramolecular vibrational energy redistribution
(IVR) from each vibrational level to remaining molecular modes have
been determined. In accordance with theoretical predictions, a decrease
in the IVR time with increasing quantum number v has
been observed for the first time. A sharp decrease in the IVR time
(down to 1.5 ps) at a wavelength of 2129 cm–1, corresponding
to the v = 3 → v = 4 vibrational
transition, is revealed. It has been shown that, with a negative chirp
of a femtosecond radiation pulse, the population of high-lying vibrational
levels of the ν1 mode increases significantly.
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