15min:
FLUORESCENCE EXCITATION SPECTRA OF PHOTO-FRAGMENTED NITROBENZENE USING A PICOSECOND LASER: POTENTIAL EVIDENCE FOR NO PRODUCED BY TWO DISTINCT CHANNELS..

CHRISTOPHER J. LUE, CHAKREE TANJAROON, J. BRUCE JOHNSON, SCOTT W. REEVE, Arkansas Center for Laser Applications and Science and Department of Chemistry and Physics, P.O. Box 419 State University, AR 72467; SUSAN D. ALLEN, Embry Riddle Aeronautical University, 600 S. Clyde Morris Boulevard, Daytona Beach, FL 32114.

Upon absorption of a UV photon, nitrobenzene can dissociate into C6H5O and NO through two different mechanisms. Evidence for these mechanisms was obtained from velocity map imaging (VMI) studies and theoretical calculations. VMI experiments showed NO produced with two distinct rotational distributions, which the calculations explained as a fast and a slow channel for NO production. We have recorded high resolution fluorescence excitation spectra of the NO resulting from photo-fragmented nitrobenzene using a pulsed picosecond tunable laser (pulse width ~ 15 ps) by means of a two-color process. In the two-color process, photons of a particular energy dissociated the nitrobenzene while photons of a different energy probed the A2 Sigma+ leftarrow X2 Pi_(1/2,3/2) NO band system between 225-260 nm. This laser system allowed us to vary the delay between the photolysis and excitation pulses. At longer delays (>1 ns), we observed an increase in the population of NO, which may be evidence that at least two photolysis channels produce NO. We present the spectra we recorded at various photolysis/probe delays ranging from 0.025 to 1.5 ns. The spectral subtraction method we used to observe the production increase is introduced.