Detection and assignment of ozone bands near 95% of the dissociation threshold: Ultrasensitive experiments for probing potential energy function and vibrational dynamics

2020 
Ozone formation and depletion play a key role in various physical and chemical atmospheric processes which remain to be understood in more detail. The modeling of such phenomena based on ozone dynamics calculations requires a detailed knowledge of quantum states, transition probabilities, and ozone potential energy surface (PES) near the dissociation threshold ${D}_{0}$. Knowledge of highly excited rovibrational states with energies approaching ${D}_{0}$ is necessary for a reliable interpretation of satellite measurements of the ozone absorption or emission in the upper atmosphere in nonlocal thermodynamic equilibrium conditions. In addition, these states provide an ideal probe of PESs computed by ab initio methods but their detection by absorption spectroscopy is particularly challenging due to the sharp decrease of the intensity with the energy of the corresponding vibrational combination and overtone bands. In this work, two very high-energy vibrational bands are detected by high sensitivity cavity ring-down spectroscopy providing a noise equivalent absorption ${\ensuremath{\alpha}}_{\mathrm{min}}$ on the order of a few ${10}^{\ensuremath{-}11}\phantom{\rule{0.16em}{0ex}}\mathrm{c}{\mathrm{m}}^{\ensuremath{-}1}$. The corresponding cold bands, assigned as ${\ensuremath{\nu}}_{1}+6{\ensuremath{\nu}}_{2}+3{\ensuremath{\nu}}_{3}$ and $6{\ensuremath{\nu}}_{1}+{\ensuremath{\nu}}_{2}+{\ensuremath{\nu}}_{3}$ centered at 7969 and $7993\phantom{\rule{0.16em}{0ex}}\mathrm{c}{\mathrm{m}}^{\ensuremath{-}1}$, respectively, are about nine orders of magnitude less intense than the well-known ${\ensuremath{\nu}}_{3}$ fundamental band near 10 \textmu{}m. The spectrum analysis allowed for the experimental determination of 240 rovibrational energy levels of the upper vibrational states. The corresponding rotational patterns, located between 93.1% and 96.7% of the dissociation threshold, are the most excited ones measured so far by absorption spectroscopy. The values of the band centers and rotational constants derived from the spectrum analysis provide further confirmation of the absence of an activation barrier on the minimum-energy path towards the dissociation threshold [Tyuterev et al., Phys. Rev. Lett. 113, 143002 (2014)]. The vibrational dynamics is discussed in the context of the radiative transition probabilities and related Einstein coefficients for the observed bands. Another important question in the context of the nuclear dynamics concerns the interaction among the three identical potential wells of the ozone molecule in the ground electronic state, which appears to be due to the Jahn-Teller effect. Recent theoretical results accounting for the three potential wells in a full symmetry approach predicted that vibration states should exhibit deviations from the conventional one-potential-well ab initio calculations, near the dissociation threshold. In the present work, we observe a better agreement of the experimentally determined energy value with the three-wells prediction for the (1,6,3) vibrational state involving a large simultaneous excitation of both bending (${\ensuremath{\upsilon}}_{2}=6$) and asymmetric stretch (${\ensuremath{\upsilon}}_{3}=3$) vibrations pointing towards a nearby well. This could be tentatively interpreted as a manifestation of the three-wells effect.
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