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(Noble Gas) n ‐NC + Molecular Ions in Noble Gas Matrices: Matrix Infrared Spectra and Electronic Structure Calculations
Author(s) -
Tsegaw Yetsedaw A.,
Li Hongmin,
Andrews Lester,
Cho HanGook,
Voßnacker Patrick,
Beckers Helmut,
Riedel Sebastian
Publication year - 2022
Publication title -
chemistry – a european journal
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.687
H-Index - 242
eISSN - 1521-3765
pISSN - 0947-6539
DOI - 10.1002/chem.202103142
Subject(s) - krypton , argon , noble gas , chemistry , neon , analytical chemistry (journal) , xenon , infrared spectroscopy , matrix isolation , ion , infrared , physics , organic chemistry , chromatography , optics
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) n CN + , 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 . H 13 CN reagent gave an 1892.3 absorption with shift instead, and a 12/13 isotopic frequency ratio–nearly the same as found for 13 CN + 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) n CN + .