4.6 Article

Trajectory study of supercollision relaxation in highly vibrationally excited pyrazine and CO2

Journal

JOURNAL OF PHYSICAL CHEMISTRY A
Volume 109, Issue 34, Pages 7657-7666

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/jp0525336

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Classical trajectory calculations were performed to simulate state-resolved energy transfer experiments of highly vibrationally excited pyrazine (E-vib = 37 900 cm(-1)) and CO2, which were conducted using a high-resolution transient infrared absorption spectrometer. The goal here is to use classical trajectories to simulate the supercollision energy transfer pathway wherein large amounts of energy are transferred in single collisions in order to compare with experimental results. In the trajectory calculations, Newton's laws of motion are used for the molecular motion, isolated molecules are treated as collections of harmonic oscillators, and intermolecular potentials are formed by pairwise Lennard-Jones potentials. The calculations qualitatively reproduce the observed energy partitioning in the scattered CO2 molecules and show that the relative partitioning between bath rotation and translation is dependent on the moment of inertia of the bath molecule. The simulations show that the low-frequency modes of the vibrationally excited pyrazine contribute most to the strong collisions. The majority of collisions lead to small Delta E values and primarily involve single encounters between the energy donor and acceptor. The large Delta E exchanges result from both single impulsive encounters and chattering collisions that involve multiple encounters.

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