Actinic Wavelength Action Spectroscopy of the IO− Reaction Intermediate

01 September 2021, Version 1
This content is a preprint and has not undergone peer review at the time of posting.

Abstract

Iodinate anions are important in the chemistry of the atmosphere where they are implicated in ozone depletion and particle formation. The atmospheric chemistry of iodine is a complex overlay of neutral-neutral, ion-neutral and photochemical processes, where many of the reactions and intermediates remain poorly characterised. This study targets the visible spectroscopy and photostability of the gas-phase hypoiodite anion (IO−), the initial product of the I− + O3 reaction, by mass spectrometry equipped with resonance-enhanced photodissociation and total ion-loss action spectroscopies. It is shown that IO− undergoes photodissociation to I− + O (3P) over 637 – 459 nm (15700 – 21800 cm−1) due to excitation to the bound first singlet excited state. Electron photodetachment competes with photodissociation above the electron detachment threshold of IO− at 521 nm (19200 cm−1) with peaks corresponding to resonant autodetachment involving the singlet excited state and the ground state of neutral IO possibly mediated by a dipole-bound state.

Keywords

total ion-loss spectroscopy
mass spectrometry
hypoiodite
potential energy surface
dipole-bound state
Action spectroscopy
photodissociation
photoelectron
atmospheric iodide
actinic radiation

Supplementary materials

Title
Description
Actions
Title
Supporting information for: Actinic Wavelength Action Spectroscopy of the IO- Reaction Intermediate
Description
See supporting information – as referenced in the text – for mass spectra, power dependence, single and multi-shot resonance enhanced photo-dissociation action spectra, CASSCF potential energy surfaces, Franck-Condon absorption simulations, vibrational levels associated with zero-order and mixed states and the observed resonance enhanced photodissociation experimental peak energies.
Actions

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