Abstract
Following a single photon VUV absorption, the N2 molecule dissociates into distinct channels leading to N atoms of different reactivities. The optically accessible singlets are bound, and dissociation occurs through spin-orbit induced transfer to the triplets. There is a forest of coupled electronic states, and we here aim to trace a path along the nonadiabatic couplings toward a particular exit channel. To achieve this, we apply a time-reversed quantum dynamical approach that corresponds to a dissociation running back. It begins with an atom-atom relative motion in a particular product channel. Starting with a Gaussian wave packet at the dissociation region of N2 and propagating it backward in time, one can see the population transferring among the triplets due to a strong nonadiabatic interaction between these states. Simultaneously, the optically active singlets get populated because of spin-orbit coupling to the triplets. Thus, backward propagation traces the nonradiative association of nitrogen atoms.
Cite
CITATION STYLE
Gelfand, N., Remacle, F., & Levine, R. D. (2023). Recombination of N Atoms in a Manifold of Electronic States Simulated by Time-Reversed Nonadiabatic Photodissociation Dynamics of N2. Journal of Physical Chemistry Letters, 14(19), 4625–4630. https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.jpclett.3c00666
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