Yonghong Xua,
Huihui Wangab,
Yonggang Yang*ab,
Changyong Liab,
Liantuan Xiaoab and
Suotang Jiaab
aState Key Laboratory of Quantum Optics and Quantum Optics Devices, Institute of Laser Spectroscopy, Shanxi University, Taiyuan 030006, China. E-mail: ygyang@sxu.edu.cn
bCollaborative Innovation Center of Extreme Optics, Shanxi University, Taiyuan 030006, China
First published on 19th January 2021
Nuclear quantum effects are often neglected for systems without hydrogen atoms. However some planar boron rotors turn out to exhibit remarkable nuclear quantum effects. Recent experiment on infrared spectroscopy of B13+ shows unexpected spectral broadening which still awaits physical explanation. Here we present quantitative investigations of the vibrational energy levels of B11− up to full dimension. A harmonic-bath averaged Hamiltonian suitable for planar boron rotors is constructed and used to predict typical types of vibrational states of B11−. Band structures caused by internal rotations are found for all the investigated vibrational states. The experimental phenomenon of spectral broadening is thus due to the band structures of the corresponding vibrational levels. The detailed information of the relevant vibrational states reported in the present work may provide valuable references for future investigations of high resolution spectroscopy of B11−.
It should be noted that nuclear quantum effects are in general important for large amplitude motions18 such as the internal rotations of boron clusters.19–22 In 2017 a universal mechanism for the internal rotations of planar boron clusters B11−, B13+, B15+, and B19− was proposed,19 with explicit treatment of nuclear quantum effects. Accordingly the inner wheel of each boron cluster rotates with respect to its pseudo-rotating outer bearing.19 Rigorous study of nuclear quantum effects in medium to large molecules is challenging,23–26 in particular when there are large amplitude motions. For this purpose the reaction path/surface Hamiltonian which divides the system into a few large amplitude motions and many small amplitude harmonic vibrations is a good alternative.27,28 For reference a simplified one-dimensional reaction path Hamiltonian has been adopted in ref. 19, neglecting all the normal modes perpendicular to the reaction path, to predict band structures for the rotational/pseudo-rotational energy levels of B11−, B13+, B15+, and B19−. The first experimental infrared spectroscopy of B13+ shows unexpected broadening of some absorption bands,29 which is consistent with the picture of energy bands but different from isolated levels calculated by standard harmonic frequencies. To discover what is the possible reason behind the observed spectral broadening it is important to obtain the details of all the relevant vibrational levels with resolution up to internal rotations. For this purpose we need full dimensional treatment for the corresponding vibrational states which will deeply expand and improve the results and physical picture in ref. 19.
In the present work we will quantitatively investigate the vibrational energy bands of the planar boron rotor B11− using the intrinsic reaction path Hamiltonian. The nuclear quantum effects will be included up to full dimension. The relation between the intrinsic reaction path and the adopted reaction path in ref. 19 will be elucidated. The theory and methods for the Hamiltonian and vibrational states are in Section 2. The results and discussions are in Section 3 and the conclusions in Section 4.
To get more details of the reaction we first locate the reaction path by the IRC (intrinsic reaction coordinate) calculations32 as implemented in Gaussian09. This will start with a TS and follow the steepest descent direction until finally reaching a GM. The reaction path can be mathematically defined by the structure R0(s) of B11− for each value of s. Here s is the intrinsic reaction coordinate which is a mass-weighted variable in units of , where me is electron mass and a0 is Bohr radius. Thus the potential energy curve along the reaction path is V0(s) = V[R0(s)].
In ref. 19 the reaction path has been well approximated as the inner wheel (two inner atoms) rotating with respect to the outer bearing (namely the outer ring of nine atoms) accompanied by small amplitude reshaping of the outer bearing (known as pseudorotation33) to adapt to the inner wheel's rotation. In ref. 19 it was shown that the complete set of motions during this reaction (namely both the internal rotation and the pseudorotation) can be uniformally characterized by a single angle variable φ. Consequently either s or φ can be used as our reaction coordinate. The equivalence between s and φ will be discussed in Section 3.
An arbitrary structure of B11− can be characterized by a vector R with 3N = 33 cartesian components for the coordinates of N = 11 atoms. First of all we need to define the coordinates of arbitrary structures using our reaction coordinate φ. To simplify the things we use the molecular fixed frame with the origin at the center of mass and the orientations of the xyz-axes along the three principal axes of the moment of inertia. Consequently the three dimensional translation is separated and the three dimensional global rotation can be separated within a good approximation.
To define the coordinates of an arbitrary structure R, we need another 3N − 7 coordinates apart from φ. It is more convenient to use the corresponding mass-weighted coordinates . There are 3N − 7 vibrational motions perpendicular to the reaction path. For most of the processes which are of interest, the perpendicular vibrations have small amplitudes. Therefore it is convenient to introduce the normal modes. Specifically we need to define normal mode vectors êk(φ) on each grid φ of the reaction path. Subsequently the corresponding normal mode coordinates Qk can be defined.
For convenience we denote the unit vector for the reaction coordinate, namely the tangent of the reaction path, as ê1(φ). By definition we have
(1) |
êk(φ), k = 2, 3, …, 3N − 6. | (2) |
They are obtained by diagonalizing the projected Hessian matrix
(3) |
(4) |
Note all the , and Qk are mass-weighted coordinates.
(5) |
According to ref. 34, the 3N − 7 perpendicular modes Q2, Q3, …, Q3N−6 form a harmonic bath which weakly affects the motions along the reaction coordinate φ. For convenience we define nb = (n2, n3, …, n3N−6) thus n = (n1, nb). Using similar adiabatic approximations in ref. 34 and 35, the wavefunctions are approximated as
(6) |
(7) |
Hvib(φ,Q)ψvibn(φ,Q) = Enψvibn(φ,Q) | (8) |
(9) |
(10) |
(11) |
(12) |
(13) |
(14) |
The central approximation of the HBA Hamiltonian is the adiabatic separation of the full dimensional wavefunction in eqn (6). The adiabatic approximation will be questionable if the motions along the reaction coordinate(s) are not slow compared to the perpendicular vibrations of normal modes. In this case it is not recommended to use the HBA Hamiltonian. Another condition which should be fulfilled is weak mode-coupling since the HBA Hamiltonian is truncated to the second order of the coupling parameters Blk(φ) according to ref. 34. In most cases we may use reaction coordinate(s) to characterise large amplitude motions. Large amplitude may corresponds to long period and thus implies relatively good adiabatic separation. On the other hand the couplings may be decreased with suitable definitions of reaction coordinate(s). For the present reaction of internal rotations of B11−, it is suitable to use the HBA Hamiltonian for vibrational analysis.
We define the molecule to be in the xy-plane. According to ref. 19 the structure of TS1,2 can be obtained by rotating TS18,1 around the z-axis by 20° + 180° = 200°. In terms of the reaction coordinate φ, from TS18,1 to TS1,2 corresponds to the internal rotation of the inner wheel with respect to the outer bearing around the z-axis by φ = 20° accompanied by small amplitude motions of the outer bearing atoms (pseudorotations).
To be more specific, we use two angles φr and φb to characterize the rotations of the wheel and bearing, respectively. The corresponding moments of inertia for the wheel and bearing are Ir and Ib, respectively. The internal rotational angle is thus φ = φr − φb. For φ = 20°, we have and . Thus we can get TS1,2 by first rotating the inner wheel of TS18,1 around z-axis by 20° with corresponding small adaptions of outer bearing. Then perform a global rotation around z-axis by −0.68°. An equivalent way to obtain TS1,2 from TS18,1 is thus a simple global rotation around z-axis by 200°–0.68° = 199.32°. In this way we generate all the 18 TSs and obtain the full reaction path shown in Fig. 2a. The corresponding potential energy curve V0(s), or equivalently V0(φ), is shown in Fig. 2b with potential barrier ΔVb = 225.65 hc cm−1.
In Fig. 2b we use two coordinates to characterize the same reaction. One is the intrinsic reaction coordinate s from ab initio calculations. The other one is the internal rotation φ defined in ref. 19. It is straightforward to obtain the following relations:
(15) |
(16) |
Up to now we have the complete information for the zero-order Hamiltonian H0(φ) = T0(φ) + V0(φ) up to an arbitrary energy reference which will be specified in Section 3.2. According to eqn (10), the zero-order Hamiltonian can be improved to the HBA Hamiltonian HHBA(φ) provided the zero-order moment of inertia and potential are replaced by Ieff(φ) and VHBA(φ), respectively. The details of and Ieff(φ) are shown in Fig. 3 for typical sets of quantum numbers nb of the harmonic bath.
Fig. 3 (a) The potential for the harmonic-bath averaged Hamiltonian in eqn (10) with given quantum numbers nb for the normal modes perpendicular to the reaction path. (b) The effective moment of inertia Ieff(φ) for the internal rotation with given quantum numbers nb. The green line indicates the zero-order moment of inertia I0. Four different cases of nb are investigated in both (a) and (b). |
In the subsequent sections we selectively investigate three typical cases of the harmonic bath: the ground state, fundamental excitations, and combinational excitations. They can be identified by nb which includes all the quantum numbers nk for k ≥ 2. Specifically we choose four cases including the ground state for nk = 0, two fundamental excitations for nk = δk,2 and nk = δk,27, and one combinational excitation for nk = δk,2 + δk,27. Among all the 26 normal modes of the harmonic bath, the mode 2 and mode 27 are the lowest-frequency and the highest-frequency modes, respectively. Accordingly the HBA potential energy curves for the four cases are shown in Fig. 3a. They all have similar shapes as the zero-order potential V0(φ) in Fig. 1b and 2b. However they include corrections caused by couplings between any pair of coordinates, cf. eqn (10)–(14). An apparent consequence of these couplings is that the HBA potential barrier will be modified. The corresponding potential barriers are 221.90, 216.46, 240.39, and 234.92hc cm−1 for nk = 0, δk,2, δk,27, and δk,2 + δk,27, respectively. Compared to the zero-order barrier of 225.65hc cm−1, the corresponding barriers are modified by −1.66%, −4.07%, 6.53%, and 4.11%, respectively. At first glance, the modifications of the HBA potential barriers are not large. However eigenenergies are in general rather sensitive to potential barriers. More details will be discussed in the subsequent sections.
Strictly speaking the effective moment of inertia Ieff(φ) also depends on the set of quantum numbers nb associated with the harmonic bath. However the dependence turns out to be negligible according to Fig. 3b. To simplify the notations we didn't explicitly write out the dependence of Ieff(φ) on nb. The differences of Ieff(φ) between the four studied cases are not noticable on the graphic scale of Fig. 3b. An enlarged plot for φ ∈ [8, 12] degrees is shown in the inset of Fig. 3b. Form the inset we can identify the extremely slight difference between nk = 0 and nk = δk,27. The contributions to Ieff(φ) from mode 2 is almost zero. Consequently the difference between nk = 0 and nk = δk,2 (or between nk = δk,27 and nk = δk,2 + δk,27) is not noticable even in the enlarged inset. The value for the zero-order moment of inertia I0 = 3.82 × 105me·a02 is indicated as a horizonal line. The value of Ieff(φ) is always larger than I0 for arbitrary φ due to non-negative characteristics of the factor Δ1(φ) in eqn (12). In general the difference between Ieff(φ) and I0 is not large, which further validates eqn (10) for the present work.
For detailed comparisons, the eigenenergies En calculated by three different models are reported in Tables 1–4. Apart from the HBA Hamiltonian, the other two are the harmonic approximation and the zero-order Hamiltonian, respectively. The harmonic energies are evaluated as , where ωGMk = ωk(φ = 10°) is the corresponding harmonic frequency of the GM structure. Here n1 is set to zero and ω1 is the frequency of the mode shown in Fig. 1d. For convenient comparisons, the zero-order Hamiltonian is defined as to be consistent with the other two models in energy reference. Note the Hamiltonian used in ref. 19 is T0(φ) + V0(φ), which is essentially the same as H0(φ) except for different energy references.
The harmonic energy is listed in the second column of each table. The corresponding harmonic energy in Table 1, namely for the ground state, is the zero point energy. Apparently the zero point energy of 9580.6hc cm−1 is quite large. This large zero point energy is automatically included in all the reported values of eigenenergies in Tables 1–4 by the three models. The zero-order eigenenergies are essentially the same for all different cases of the harmonic bath, with detailed values listed in the third column of each table. The only difference between the third columns of any two tables is just a global shift of all energy levels. The ground state energy of 9581hc cm−1 is quite close to the harmonic value, which further confirms the good correlation between the normal mode in Fig. 1d and the internal rotation characterized in Fig. 1a and 2a. The eigenenergies obtained by diagonalization of the HBA Hamiltonian are listed in the fourth column of each table. In general the HBA energies are lower than the corresponding zero-order values. This is because the HBA Hamiltonian contains contributions from full dimensional motions of the molecule. Consequently the molecule has more freedom to relax, compared to the one-dimensional zero-order Hamiltonian. For example, the HBA ground state energy of 9569.66hc cm−1 is more stable than the corresponding zero-order level by 11.34hc cm−1.
Quantum numbera n1 | Eigenenergyb En (hc cm−1) | HBA improvementsc of En (hc cm−1) | Excitation energy En − E0 (hc cm−1) | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Harmonic | H0 | HHBA | From VHBA | From Ieff | From HHBA | H0 | HHBA | |
a Eigenenergies associated with the reaction coordinate φ are labelled with quantum number n1. The quantum number nk (k ≥ 2) is associated with the k-th normal mode.b Energies are calculated by three different models: the harmonic approximation, the zero-order Hamiltonian H0(φ) and the HBA Hamiltonian HHBA(φ) in eqn (10).c The improvements by HHBA(φ) with respect to H0(φ). | ||||||||
0 | 9580.60 | 9581.00 | 9569.66 | −11.14 | −0.20 | −11.34 | — | — |
1, 2 | — | 9581.05 | 9569.69 | −11.14 | −0.22 | −11.36 | 0.05 | 0.03 |
3, 4 | — | 9581.21 | 9569.83 | −11.14 | −0.25 | −11.38 | 0.21 | 0.17 |
5, 6 | — | 9581.46 | 9570.07 | −11.13 | −0.27 | −11.39 | 0.46 | 0.41 |
7, 8 | — | 9581.76 | 9570.35 | −11.12 | −0.29 | −11.41 | 0.76 | 0.69 |
9, 10 | — | 9582.10 | 9570.68 | −11.11 | −0.32 | −11.42 | 1.10 | 1.02 |
11, 12 | — | 9582.41 | 9570.98 | −11.10 | −0.34 | −11.43 | 1.41 | 1.32 |
13, 14 | — | 9582.68 | 9571.24 | −11.09 | −0.35 | −11.44 | 1.68 | 1.58 |
15, 16 | — | 9582.85 | 9571.41 | −11.08 | −0.36 | −11.44 | 1.85 | 1.75 |
17 | — | 9582.91 | 9571.47 | −11.08 | −0.37 | −11.44 | 1.91 | 1.81 |
18 | — | 9686.58 | 9673.75 | −12.47 | −0.36 | −12.83 | 105.58 | 104.09 |
19, 20 | — | 9687.08 | 9674.25 | −12.47 | −0.37 | −12.83 | 106.08 | 104.59 |
21, 22 | — | 9688.56 | 9675.72 | −12.45 | −0.39 | −12.84 | 107.56 | 106.06 |
23, 24 | — | 9690.95 | 9678.10 | −12.43 | −0.43 | −12.85 | 109.95 | 108.44 |
25, 26 | — | 9694.15 | 9681.28 | −12.40 | −0.48 | −12.87 | 113.15 | 111.62 |
27, 28 | — | 9697.99 | 9685.10 | −12.36 | −0.53 | −12.89 | 116.99 | 115.44 |
29, 30 | — | 9702.19 | 9689.28 | −12.31 | −0.60 | −12.91 | 121.19 | 119.62 |
31, 32 | — | 9706.28 | 9693.35 | −12.26 | −0.67 | −12.93 | 125.28 | 123.69 |
33, 34 | — | 9709.48 | 9696.54 | −12.21 | −0.73 | −12.94 | 128.48 | 126.88 |
35 | — | 9710.73 | 9697.79 | −12.19 | −0.76 | −12.94 | 129.73 | 128.13 |
To get further details on how large the HBA Hamiltonian makes improvements to the eigenenergies compared to the zero-order Hamiltonian, the differences between the values of the corresponding eigenenergies En obtained by the HBA and the zero-order Hamiltonians are documented in Column 7 of each table. In general all the energy levels are further stabilized due to the improvements from the HBA Hamiltonian. Specifically the eigenenergies En are improved due to the HBA potential VHBA and the moment of inertia Ieff. We further calculated the improvements solely by VHBA without Ieff, or solely by Ieff without VHBA. The corresponding results are shown in Column 5 and Column 6, respectively. The improvements of En from Ieff almost have no differences between the four cases, which is consistent with Fig. 3b. The improvements in Column 7 of each table can be well approximated as sum of the corresponding values in Columns 5 and 6. This is because the two factors VHBA and Ieff mainly affect potential energy and kinetic energy separately. Since Ieff is larger than I0, cf. Fig. 3b or eqn (11), the kinetic energy from the HBA Hamiltonian is lower than the zero-order case. Concerning the potential energy, the difference between VHBA and V0 contains two terms according to eqn (10). One term is ΔV(φ) in eqn (14). According to eqn (14), ΔV(φ) is negative and does not depends on quantum numbers nb of normal modes. For each of the reported energy levels the mean value of ΔV(φ) is about −100hc cm−1. The other term is the average energy of the 26 normal modes in terms of effective harmonic frequencies ωeffk(φ). According to eqn (11) each effective frequency ωeffk(φ) is larger than the original frequency ωk(φ). Consequently the contribution of this term to the total eigenenergy En is larger than the corresponding zero-order case. The sum of the above two potential energy terms leads to negative contributions for En (compared to zero-order) as shown in Column 5 of each table.
For possible comparisons with high-resolution experiments which may be measurable in the future, we further calculated the excitation energy En − E0 for each of the investigated states. The corresponding values are documented in the last two columns of Tables 1–4 for zero-order and HBA models, respectively. For the ground state harmonic bath (Table 1) all the excitation energies from HBA Hamiltonian are slightly redshifted compared to zero-order case. Similarly all the HBA excitation energies are redshifted by about 20hc cm−1 in Table 2 (fundamental excitation of mode 2). However, for the fundamental excitation of mode 27 in Table 3, all the HBA excitation energies are blueshifted by several wavenumbers. Then the combinational excitation case in Table 4 also exhibits redshifts for all the HBA excitation energies due to the competition between mode 2 and mode 27.
Quantum number n1 | Eigenenergy En (hc cm−1) | HBA improvements of En (hc cm−1) | Excitation energy En − E0 (hc cm−1) | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Harmonic | H0 | HHBA | From VHBA | From Ieff | From HHBA | H0 | HHBA | |
0 | 9729.77 | 9730.17 | 9701.25 | −28.72 | −0.20 | −28.92 | 149.17 | 131.59 |
1, 2 | — | 9730.22 | 9701.29 | −28.72 | −0.22 | −28.93 | 149.22 | 131.63 |
3, 4 | — | 9730.38 | 9701.44 | −28.70 | −0.25 | −28.94 | 149.38 | 131.78 |
5, 6 | — | 9730.63 | 9701.69 | −28.68 | −0.27 | −28.94 | 149.63 | 132.03 |
7, 8 | — | 9730.94 | 9702.00 | −28.65 | −0.29 | −28.94 | 149.94 | 132.34 |
9, 10 | — | 9731.27 | 9702.34 | −28.62 | −0.32 | −28.93 | 150.27 | 132.68 |
11, 12 | — | 9731.59 | 9702.66 | −28.59 | −0.34 | −28.92 | 150.59 | 133.00 |
13, 14 | — | 9731.85 | 9702.94 | −28.57 | −0.35 | −28.91 | 150.85 | 133.28 |
15, 16 | — | 9732.02 | 9703.12 | −28.55 | −0.36 | −28.90 | 151.02 | 133.46 |
17 | — | 9732.08 | 9703.18 | −28.55 | −0.37 | −28.90 | 151.08 | 133.52 |
18 | — | 9835.75 | 9803.16 | −32.25 | −0.36 | −32.60 | 254.75 | 233.50 |
19, 20 | — | 9836.25 | 9803.66 | −32.23 | −0.37 | −32.59 | 255.25 | 234.00 |
21, 22 | — | 9837.73 | 9805.16 | −32.19 | −0.39 | −32.57 | 256.73 | 235.50 |
23, 24 | — | 9840.12 | 9807.58 | −32.13 | −0.43 | −32.54 | 259.12 | 237.92 |
25, 26 | — | 9843.32 | 9810.82 | −32.03 | −0.48 | −32.50 | 262.32 | 241.16 |
27, 28 | — | 9847.16 | 9814.72 | −31.92 | −0.53 | −32.44 | 266.16 | 245.06 |
29, 30 | — | 9851.36 | 9819.00 | −31.77 | −0.60 | −32.36 | 270.36 | 249.34 |
31, 32 | — | 9855.45 | 9823.19 | −31.61 | −0.67 | −32.27 | 274.45 | 253.53 |
33, 34 | — | 9858.65 | 9826.48 | −31.45 | −0.73 | −32.17 | 277.65 | 256.82 |
35 | — | 9859.90 | 9827.78 | −31.38 | −0.76 | −32.12 | 278.90 | 258.12 |
Quantum number n1 | Eigenenergy En (hc cm−1) | HBA improvements of En (hc cm−1) | Excitation energy En − E0 (hc cm−1) | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Harmonic | H0 | HHBA | From VHBA | From Ieff | From HHBA | H0 | HHBA | |
0 | 11096.46 | 11096.85 | 11090.25 | −6.39 | −0.20 | −6.60 | 1515.86 | 1520.59 |
1, 2 | — | 11096.91 | 11090.28 | −6.40 | −0.23 | −6.63 | 1515.91 | 1520.62 |
3, 4 | — | 11097.07 | 11090.40 | −6.42 | −0.25 | −6.67 | 1516.07 | 1520.74 |
5, 6 | — | 11097.32 | 11090.59 | −6.44 | −0.27 | −6.72 | 1516.32 | 1520.93 |
7, 8 | — | 11097.62 | 11090.84 | −6.48 | −0.30 | −6.78 | 1516.62 | 1521.18 |
9, 10 | — | 11097.95 | 11091.12 | −6.51 | −0.32 | −6.84 | 1516.95 | 1521.46 |
11, 12 | — | 11098.27 | 11091.38 | −6.55 | −0.34 | −6.89 | 1517.27 | 1521.72 |
13, 14 | — | 11098.54 | 11091.60 | −6.58 | −0.35 | −6.94 | 1517.54 | 1521.94 |
15, 16 | — | 11098.71 | 11091.74 | −6.60 | −0.36 | −6.96 | 1517.71 | 1522.08 |
17 | — | 11098.77 | 11091.79 | −6.61 | −0.37 | −6.98 | 1517.77 | 1522.13 |
18 | — | 11202.44 | 11199.17 | −2.87 | −0.37 | −3.27 | 1621.44 | 1629.51 |
19, 20 | — | 11202.94 | 11199.63 | −2.90 | −0.37 | −3.31 | 1621.94 | 1629.97 |
21, 22 | — | 11204.41 | 11200.98 | −3.00 | −0.39 | −3.43 | 1623.41 | 1631.32 |
23, 24 | — | 11206.80 | 11203.17 | −3.17 | −0.43 | −3.64 | 1625.80 | 1633.51 |
25, 26 | — | 11210.00 | 11206.07 | −3.41 | −0.48 | −3.93 | 1629.00 | 1636.41 |
27, 28 | — | 11213.84 | 11209.53 | −3.74 | −0.54 | −4.32 | 1632.84 | 1639.87 |
29, 30 | — | 11218.05 | 11213.24 | −4.17 | −0.61 | −4.81 | 1637.05 | 1643.58 |
31, 32 | — | 11222.14 | 11216.75 | −4.68 | −0.68 | −5.39 | 1641.14 | 1647.09 |
33, 34 | — | 11225.33 | 11219.40 | −5.17 | −0.74 | −5.93 | 1644.33 | 1649.74 |
35 | — | 11226.59 | 11220.41 | −5.39 | −0.76 | −6.18 | 1645.59 | 1650.75 |
Quantum number n1 | Eigenenergy En (hc cm−1) | HBA improvements of En (hc cm−1) | Excitation energy En − E0 (hc cm−1) | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Harmonic | H0 | HHBA | From VHBA | From Ieff | From HHBA | H0 | HHBA | |
0 | 11245.63 | 11246.03 | 11221.88 | −23.94 | −0.20 | −24.14 | 1665.03 | 1652.22 |
1, 2 | — | 11246.08 | 11221.91 | −23.94 | −0.23 | −24.17 | 1665.08 | 1652.25 |
3, 4 | — | 11246.24 | 11222.04 | −23.95 | −0.25 | −24.20 | 1665.24 | 1652.38 |
5, 6 | — | 11246.49 | 11222.25 | −23.97 | −0.27 | −24.24 | 1665.49 | 1652.59 |
7, 8 | — | 11246.79 | 11222.52 | −23.98 | −0.30 | −24.28 | 1665.79 | 1652.86 |
9, 10 | — | 11247.13 | 11222.81 | −24.00 | −0.32 | −24.32 | 1666.13 | 1653.15 |
11, 12 | — | 11247.44 | 11223.08 | −24.02 | −0.34 | −24.36 | 1666.44 | 1653.42 |
13, 14 | — | 11247.71 | 11223.32 | −24.04 | −0.35 | −24.39 | 1666.71 | 1653.66 |
15, 16 | — | 11247.88 | 11223.47 | −24.05 | −0.36 | −24.41 | 1666.88 | 1653.81 |
17 | — | 11247.94 | 11223.52 | −24.05 | −0.37 | −24.42 | 1666.94 | 1653.86 |
18 | — | 11351.61 | 11328.66 | −22.56 | −0.37 | −22.95 | 1770.61 | 1759.00 |
19, 20 | — | 11352.11 | 11329.13 | −22.59 | −0.37 | −22.99 | 1771.11 | 1759.47 |
21, 22 | — | 11353.58 | 11330.50 | −22.66 | −0.39 | −23.08 | 1772.58 | 1760.84 |
23, 24 | — | 11355.97 | 11332.73 | −22.78 | −0.43 | −23.24 | 1774.97 | 1763.07 |
25, 26 | — | 11359.17 | 11335.70 | −22.97 | −0.48 | −23.47 | 1778.17 | 1766.04 |
27, 28 | — | 11363.01 | 11339.23 | −23.22 | −0.54 | −23.79 | 1782.01 | 1769.57 |
29, 30 | — | 11367.22 | 11343.03 | −23.56 | −0.61 | −24.19 | 1786.22 | 1773.37 |
31, 32 | — | 11371.31 | 11346.65 | −23.97 | −0.68 | −24.67 | 1790.31 | 1776.99 |
33, 34 | — | 11374.50 | 11349.38 | −24.37 | −0.74 | −25.12 | 1793.50 | 1779.72 |
35 | — | 11375.76 | 11350.43 | −24.55 | −0.76 | −25.33 | 1794.76 | 1780.77 |
To deeply investigate the properties of the energy bands, we can arrange the four studied cases in terms of barrier heights. Consequently we have Tables 2, 1, 4, and 3 with barrier heights in ascending order: 216.46, 221.90, 234.92, and 240.39hc cm−1, respectively. Note we only focus on results of the HBA model for the time being. In this order the band widths of the lowest energy band are 1.93, 1.81, 1.64, and 1.54hc cm−1, respectively. The band widths of the second energy band are 24.62, 24.04, 21.77, and 21.24hc cm−1, respectively. Clearly the band width decreases when the barrier height increases, for both the lowest and the second energy bands. While the corresponding band gaps are 99.98, 102.28, 105.14, and 107.38hc cm−1, respectively. The band gap increases when the barrier height increases. Since the differences between the effective moment of inertia are negligible, cf. Fig. 3b, the behavior of the band structures can be predicted and explained purely in terms of the barrier heights. The band gap can be approximately estimated as the fundamental excitation energy for an isolated potential well. Higher barrier leads to larger curvature of the potential well, which in turn has higher fundamental transition frequency. The band width is determined by tunnelling between neighbouring potential wells. Higher barrier leads to smaller tunnelling probability and consequently to narrower band width. For infinitely high barrier, tunnelling is prohibited thus the band width would be zero. Harmonic approximation corresponds to the case of infinitely high barrier so that the system would be located in a single potential well. In this case the unexpected spectral broadening observed in ref. 29 would disappear. However in reality the barrier is rather low. Consequently tunnelling between neighboring potential wells gives rise to fairly large tunnelling splittings which appear as band widths of vibrational levels. The phenomenon happens essentially in all the relevant vibrational levels, which leads to spectral broadening of the infrared spectra.
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