Photodissociation Dynamics of SO<sub>2</sub> from the Electronically Excited C State
POSTER
Abstract
The early earth rock record shows unusual sulfur mass independent fractionation that is potentially caused by the UV photodissociation of SO2. We investigate the dynamics of SO2 photodissociation from the electronically excited C state, using tunable, pulsed UV light (λ = 210-220 nm) to initiate the dissociation and state-resolved high-resolution transient IR spectroscopy to measure the appearance of SO(v=0) product state. Individual ro-vibrational states of nascent SO products are measured along with the fluorescence excitation spectrum to determine anisotropy parameters and the dissociation quantum yield. UV wavelength dependent studies were used to obtain rotational energy distributions. The measurements near the photodissociation threshold at λ = 220 nm provide insight into the dissociation dynamics of SO2 from the C state.
*Funding for this project was provided by the NASA Astrobiology Program, NNX13AJ49G-EXO, “A Collaborative Experimental-Theoretical Investigation of Key Pathways in Atmospheric Photochemistry Related to the Origin of Sulfur Mass Independent Fractionation.”
Presenters
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Christopher R Lukowski
- Univ of Maryland-College Park