Journal of Physical Chemistry A, Vol.110, No.9, 3179-3185, 2006
Kinetically controlled selective ionization study on the efficient collisional energy transfer in the deactivation of highly vibrationally excited trans-stilbene
Direct measurements of the gas-phase collisional energy transfer parameters are reported for the deactivation of highly vibrationally excited trans-stilbene molecules, initially prepared with an average energy of about 40 000 cm(-1), in the bath gases argon, CO2, and n-heptane. The method of kinetically controlled selective ionization (KCSI) has been used. Complete experimental collisional transition probability density functions P(E',E) are determined, which are represented by a monoexponential form with a parametric exponent in the argument, P(E',E) proportional to exp[-{(E - E')/(C-0 + C1E)}(Y)] (for downward collisions), well established from earlier KCSI studies. A comparison of the first moments of energy transfer rate constants, k(E,1), or of resulting first moments of energy transfer, (Delta E(E)), for trans-stilbene with those for azulene and toluene clearly shows the considerably more efficient deactivation of trans-stilbene for all bath gases, presumably due to the much greater number of very low-frequency modes of trans-stilbene. However, on a relative scale this gain in deactivation rate of excited trans-stilbene is clearly collider dependent and decreases distinctly with the growing collision efficiency of the larger bath gas molecules.