Rotor in a cage: Infrared spectroscopy of an endohedral hydrogen-fullerene complex.
/ Authors
S. Mamone, Min Ge, D. Hüvonen, U. Nagel, A. Danquigny, F. Cuda, M. Grossel, Y. Murata, K. Komatsu, M. Levitt
and 2 more authors
/ Abstract
We report the observation of quantized translational and rotational motion of molecular hydrogen inside the cages of C(60). Narrow infrared absorption lines at the temperature of 6 K correspond to vibrational excitations in combination with translational and rotational excitations and show well-resolved splittings due to the coupling between translational and rotational modes of the endohedral H(2) molecule. A theoretical model shows that H(2) inside C(60) is a three-dimensional quantum rotor moving in a nearly spherical potential. The theory provides both the frequencies and the intensities of the observed infrared transitions. Good agreement with the experimental results is obtained by fitting a small number of empirical parameters to describe the confining potential, as well as the relative concentration of ortho- and para-H(2).
Journal: The Journal of chemical physics
DOI: 10.1063/1.3080163