15min:
DISSOCIATION DYNAMICS OF VIBRATIONALLY EXCITED TRANS-PERP HOONO.

IAN M. KONEN, ILANA B. POLLACK, EUNICE X. J. LI AND MARSHA I. LESTER, Department of Chemistry, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, PA 19104-6323.

Peroxynitrous acid (HOONO) is formed by the reaction of OH and NO2 in conjunction with the more stable isomer, nitric acid (HONO2). Determination of the HOONO binding energy is essential for atmospheric models to correctly budget these two reactive radical species. We have used an infrared pump-ultraviolet probe technique to obtain an accurate measurement of the binding energy of the trans perp (tp) conformer. The OH (v=0) rotational state distribution resulting from vibrational predissociation of tp-HOONO (2 nu_\mathrmOH) was measured by saturated laser induced fluorescence, and found to be consistent with a statistical model. A dissociation energy of 16.2~kcal/mol was obtained from the best fit of the data to a prior distribution, and is complemented by the value inferred from the highest energy channel with observable population. This information, combined with an ab initio calculation of 3.4 kcal/mol for the relative conformational stability,\footnoteBean, B. D. et al. , J.~Phys.~Chem.~A \textbf\underline107, 6974 (2003). provides an estimate of 19.6~kcal/mol for the binding energy of the more stable cis-cis (cc) conformer. Additional insight into the decay dynamics is provided by the 0.2~cm-1 linewidth observed in the IR spectrum. A discussion is presented on the likely origin of this homogeneous broadening (corresponding to a 30 ps lifetime) in terms of intramolecular vibrational redistribution (IVR) and unimolecular dissociation.