High resolution UV spectroscopy of phenol and the hydrogen bonded phenol-water cluster
- 15 January 1996
- journal article
- research article
- Published by AIP Publishing in The Journal of Chemical Physics
- Vol. 104 (3), 972-982
- https://doi.org/10.1063/1.470821
Abstract
The S1←S0 000 transitions of phenol and the hydrogen bonded phenol(H2O)1 cluster have been studied by high resolution fluorescence excitation spectroscopy. All lines in the monomer spectrum are split by 56±4 MHz due to the internal rotation of the −OH group about the a axis. The barrier for this internal motion is determined in the ground and excited states; V2″=1215 cm−1, and V2′=4710 cm−1. The rotational constants for the monomer in the ground state are in agreement with those reported in microwave studies. The excited state rotational constants were found to be A′=5313.7 MHz, B′=2620.5 MHz, and C′=1756.08 MHz. The region of the redshifted 000 transition of phenol(H2O)1 shows two distinct bands which are 0.85 cm−1 apart. Their splitting arises from a torsional motion which interchanges the two equivalent H atoms in the H2O moiety of the cluster. This assignment was confirmed by spin statistical considerations. Both bands could be fit to rigid rotor Hamiltonians. Due to the interaction between the overall rotation of the entire cluster and the internal rotation, both bands have different rotational constants. They show that V2′<V2″, and that the internal rotation axis is nearly parallel to the a-axis of the cluster. If it is assumed that the structure of the rotor part does not change upon electronic excitation, the internal motion becomes simply a rotation of the water molecule around its symmetry axis. Assuming this motion, barriers of 180 and 130 cm−1 could be estimated for the S0 and S1 states, respectively. The analysis of the rotational constants of the cluster yielded an O–O distance of the hydrogen bond of 2.93 Å in the ground state and 2.89 Å in the electronically excited state. In the equilibrium structure of the cluster, the plane containing phenol bisects the plane of the water molecule.Keywords
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