(Noble Gas)n-NC+ Molecular Ions in Noble Gas Matrices: Matrix Infrared Spectra and Electronic Structure Calculations |
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Authors: | Dr. Yetsedaw A. Tsegaw Dr. Hongmin Li Prof. em. Dr. Dr. h. c. Lester Andrews Prof. Dr. Han-Gook Cho Patrick Voßnacker Dr. Helmut Beckers Prof. Dr. Sebastian Riedel |
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Affiliation: | 1. Anorganische Chemie, Institut fur Chemie und Biochemie, Freie Universitat Berlin, Fabeckstrasse 34–36, 14195 Berlin, Germany;2. Department of Chemistry, University of Virginia, Charlottesville, Virginia, 22904 USA;3. Department of Chemistry, Incheon National University, 119 Academy-ro, Yeonsu-gu, Incheon, 22012 South Korea |
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Abstract: | An investigation of pulsed-laser-ablated Zn, Cd and Hg metal atom reactions with HCN under excess argon during co-deposition with laser-ablated Hg atoms from a dental amalgam target also provided Hg emissions capable of photoionization of the CN photo-dissociation product. A new band at 1933.4 cm−1 in the region of the CN and CN+ gas-phase fundamental absorptions that appeared upon annealing the matrix to 20 K after sample deposition, and disappeared upon UV photolysis is assigned to (Ar)nCN+, our key finding. It is not possible to determine the n coefficient exactly, but structure calculations suggest that one, two, three or four argon atoms can solvate the CN+ cation in an argon matrix with C−N absorptions calculated (B3LYP) to be between 2317.2 and 2319.8 cm−1. Similar bands were observed in solid krypton at 1920.5, in solid xenon at 1935.4 and in solid neon at 1947.8 cm−1. H13CN reagent gave an 1892.3 absorption with shift instead, and a 12/13 isotopic frequency ratio–nearly the same as found for 13CN+ itself in the gas phase and in the argon matrix. The CN+ molecular ion serves as a useful infrared probe to examine Ng clusters. The following ion reactions are believed to occur here: the first step upon sample deposition is assisted by a focused pulsed YAG laser, and the second step occurs on sample annealing: (Ar)2++CN→Ar+CN+→(Ar)nCN+. |
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Keywords: | noble gases cyanide cations electronic structure calculations IR probes laser ablation mercury |
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