posted on 2022-05-18, 19:10authored byChao He, Shane J. Goettl, Zhenghai Yang, Ralf I. Kaiser, Anatoliy A. Nikolayev, Valeriy N. Azyazov, Alexander M. Mebel
The
subvalent germanium monoxide (GeO, X1Σ+) molecule has been prepared via the elementary reaction of
atomic germanium (Ge, 3Pj)
and molecular oxygen (O2, X3Σg–) with each reactant in its electronic ground
state by means of single-collision conditions. The merging of electronic
structure calculations with crossed beam experiments suggests that
the formation of germanium monoxide (GeO, X1Σ+) commences on the singlet surface through unimolecular decomposition
of a linear singlet collision complex (GeOO, i1, C∞v, 1Σ+) via intersystem
crossing (ISC) yielding nearly exclusively germanium monoxide (GeO,
X1Σ+) along with atomic oxygen in its
electronic ground state [p1, O(3P)]. These
results provide a sophisticated reaction mechanism of the germanium–oxygen
system and demonstrate the efficient “heavy atom effect”
of germanium in ISC yielding (nearly) exclusive singlet germanium
monoxide and triplet atomic oxygen compared to similar systems (carbon
dioxide and dinitrogen monoxide), in which non-adiabatic reaction
dynamics represent only minor channels.