15min:
TUNNELING SPLITTING AND HYPERFINE STRUCTURE IN THE Na3 CLUSTER.

LAURENT H. COUDERT, Laboratoire de Photophysique Moléculaire, C.N.R.S., Bât. 210, Université Paris-Sud, 91405 Orsay Cedex, France; WOLFGANG E. ERNST, Department of Physics and Chemistry, The Pennsylvania State University, 104 Davey Laboratory, University Park, PA 16802.

The hyperfine structure of non-rigid molecules is of great interest especially for molecules in which the identical nuclei exchanged by the large amplitude motions(s) are also those giving rise to the hyperfine coupling.

The Na3 cluster in its ground electronic 2B2 state illustrates this case quite nicely. In this cluster the large amplitude pseudorotational motion corresponds to an interchange of the three sodium atoms and allows them to sample different electronic environments of the isosceles triangle shaped equilibrium configuration. This alters the effects of the magnetic spin-spin hyperfine interaction. For nondegenerate A -type tunneling levels, a completely symmetrical effective hyperfine Hamiltonian invariant under any operation of the S3 permutation group arises. For doubly degenerate E -type levels, a less symmetrical effective hyperfine Hamiltonian arises.

The goal of the present talk is to understand the hyperfine pattern spectra which have been recorded for the Na3 cluster. Although no assignments of the microwave lines are possible yet, a preliminary analysis seems to indicate that the tunneling splitting is on the order of magnitude of the hyperfine coupling. In this paper the implications of this result will be discussed considering two limiting cases: the tunneling splitting will be assumed to be either large or small compared to the hyperfine coupling. In the former case, the effective hyperfine Hamiltonians mentioned in the previous paragraph are sufficient to predict hyperfine patterns. In the latter case, A and E -type levels must be treated simultaneously. Also, as the present microwave spectra were obtained using optical-optical double resonance techniques, the way the choice of the pump transition modifies the hyperfine patterns will be tentatively described in each limiting case.