Microwave Three-Wave Mixing Spectroscopy of Chiral Molecules in Weakly Bound Complexes

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Abstract

Since the first experimental implementation in 2013, microwave three-wave mixing has emerged as a robust spectroscopic approach for analyzing and controlling chiral molecules in the gas phase. This resonant, coherent, and nonlinear technique is based on the three-dimensional light-matter interaction in the electric dipole approximation, allowing for isomer- and conformer-selective chiral analysis with high resolution. Here we demonstrate the utility of microwave three-wave mixing for analyzing a molecular complex, limonene-H2O, which serves as a compelling example of addressing its potential to improve the chiral sensitivity for only weakly polar chiral molecules. The use of molecular complexes can also extend the applicability of microwave three-wave mixing to chiral systems that are not in the C1 point group.

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Sun, W., & Schnell, M. (2023). Microwave Three-Wave Mixing Spectroscopy of Chiral Molecules in Weakly Bound Complexes. Journal of Physical Chemistry Letters, 14(33), 7389–7394. https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.jpclett.3c01900

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