The technique of H(D) Rydberg atom photofragment translational spectroscopy has been used to investigate the photodissociation dynamics of the mixed isotogomers NH2D and NHD2 following the excitation to the v′2 = 0 and 1 levels of their lowest lying à 1B1 (C2v) excited electronic states. Peaks in the resulting total kinetic energy release (TKER) spectra are assigned to levels of the NH2, NHD, or ND2 fragments with a wide range of quantum numbers Ka for rotation about their a inertial axes, and with N = Ka, N = Ka + 1, or N = Ka + 2 as appropriate. These data provide the first measurements of high rotational levels for the ground electronic state of the NHD radical. The least squares fitting of all these spectra, and those resulting from NH3 and ND3, to the best calculated NH2, NHD, and/or ND2 rotational term values provides accurate estimations of the respective N-H and N-D bond dissociation energies D00 across the whole series. These values are D00(H-NH2)=37 115±20 cm-1 (4.602±0.002 eV); D00(H-NHD)=37 240±50 cm-1; D00(H-ND2)=37 300±30 cm-1; D00(D-NHD)=37 880±60 cm-1; and D00(D-ND2)=38 010±20 cm-1. The differences between these values are fully consistent with differences in zero-point energies and lead to a mean value of De=40 510±25 cm-1. Dissociation of NH2D or NHD2 through their (Ã-X̃) 20 bands to give an NHD product leads to TKER spectra with a much higher statistical character than those leading to an NH2 or ND2 product, and to those obtained following excitation through the 000 bands. This is rationalized in a semiquantitative manner in terms of a varying contribution to the dissociation rate of the parent molecules from internal conversion (IC) to high levels of their respective ground states. Nuclear permutation symmetry appears to play an important role both for the IC rates and for the subsequent branching between product channels. © 1996 American Institute of Physics.
CITATION STYLE
Mordaunt, D. H., Dixon, R. N., & Ashfold, M. N. R. (1996). Photodissociation dynamics of A state ammonia molecules. II. the isotopic dependence for partially and fully deuterated isotopomers. Journal of Chemical Physics, 104(17), 6472–6481. https://doi.org/10.1063/1.471368
Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.