Pronounced non-Condon effects in the ultrafast infrared spectroscopy of water
Abstract
In the context of vibrational spectroscopy in liquids, non-Condon effects refer to the dependence of the vibrational transition dipole moment of a particular molecule on the rotational and translational coordinates of all the molecules in the liquid. For strongly hydrogen-bonded systems, such as liquid water, non-Condon effects are large. That is, the bond dipole derivative of an OH stretch depends strongly on its hydrogen-bonding environment. Previous calculations of nonlinear vibrational spectroscopy in liquids have not included these non-Condon effects. We find that for water, inclusion of these effects is important for an accurate calculation of, for example, homodyned and heterodyned three-pulse echoes. Such echo experiments have been "inverted" to obtain the OH stretch frequency time-correlation function, but by necessity the Condon and other approximations are made in this inversion procedure. Our conclusion is that for water, primarily because of strong non-Condon effects, this inversion may not lead to the correct frequency time-correlation function. Nevertheless, one can still make comparison between theory and experiment by calculating the experimental echo observables themselves.
- Publication:
-
Journal of Chemical Physics
- Pub Date:
- July 2005
- DOI:
- Bibcode:
- 2005JChPh.123d4513S
- Keywords:
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- 78.30.Cp;
- 63.50.+x;
- 61.20.Ja;
- 78.47.+p;
- Liquids;
- Vibrational states in disordered systems;
- Computer simulation of liquid structure;
- Time-resolved optical spectroscopies and other ultrafast optical measurements in condensed matter