Understanding the anharmonic vibrational structure of the carbon dioxide dimer

Understanding the vibrational structure of the CO system is important to confirm the potential energy surface and interactions in such van der Waals complexes. In this work, we use our previously developed mbCO2 potential function to explore the vibrational structure of the CO monomer and dimer. The...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inThe Journal of chemical physics Vol. 150; no. 14; p. 144302
Main Authors Maystrovsky, Samuel, Keçeli, Murat, Sode, Olaseni
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published United States 14.04.2019
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Summary:Understanding the vibrational structure of the CO system is important to confirm the potential energy surface and interactions in such van der Waals complexes. In this work, we use our previously developed mbCO2 potential function to explore the vibrational structure of the CO monomer and dimer. The potential function has been trained to reproduce the potential energies at the CCSD(T)-F12b/aug-cc-pVTZ level of electronic structure theory. The harmonic approximation, as well as anharmonic corrections using vibrational structure theories such as vibrational self-consistent field, vibrational second-order Møller-Plesset perturbation, and vibrational configuration interaction (VCI), is applied to address the vibrational motions. We compare the vibrational results using the mbCO2 potential function with traditional electronic structure theory results and to experimental frequencies. The anharmonic results for the monomer most closely match the experimental data to within 3 cm , including the Fermi dyad frequencies. The intermolecular and intramolecular dimer frequencies were treated separately and show good agreement with the most recent theoretical and experimental results from the literature. The VCI treatment of the dimer vibrational motions accounts for vibrational mixing and delocalization, such that we observe the dimer Fermi resonance phenomena, both in the intramolecular and intermolecular regions.
ISSN:1089-7690
DOI:10.1063/1.5089460