Nature Chemistry 2018-04-09

O2−O2 and O2−N2 collision-induced absorption mechanisms unravelled

Tijs Karman, Mark A. J. Koenis, Agniva Banerjee, David H. Parker, Iouli E. Gordon, Ad van der Avoird, Wim J. van der Zande, Gerrit C. Groenenboom

Index: 10.1038/s41557-018-0015-x

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Abstract

Collision-induced absorption is the phenomenon in which interactions between colliding molecules lead to absorption of light, even for transitions that are forbidden for the isolated molecules. Collision-induced absorption contributes to the atmospheric heat balance and is important for the electronic excitations of O2 that are used for remote sensing. Here, we present a theoretical study of five vibronic transitions in O2−O2 and O2−N2, using analytical models and numerical quantum scattering calculations. We unambiguously identify the underlying absorption mechanism, which is shown to depend explicitly on the collision partner—contrary to textbook knowledge. This explains experimentally observed qualitative differences between O2−O2 and O2−N2 collisions in the overall intensity, line shape and vibrational dependence of the absorption spectrum. It is shown that these results can be used to discriminate between conflicting experimental data and even to identify unphysical results, thus impacting future experimental studies and atmospheric applications.

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