We describe an instrument which can be used to analyze complex chemical mixtures at high resolution and high sensitivity. Molecules are collisionally cooled with helium gas at cryogenic temperatures (∼ 4-7 K), and subsequently detected using chirped pulse microwave spectroscopy. Here we demonstrate three significant improvements to the apparatus relative to an earlier version: (1) extension of its operating range by more than a factor of two, from 12 -18 GHz to 12 -26 GHz, which allows a much wider range of species to be characterized; (2) improved detection sensitivity owing to use of cryogenically-cooled lownoise amplifiers and protection switches, and (3) a versatile method of sample input that enables analysis of solids, liquids, gases, and solutions, without the need for chemical separation (as demonstrated with a 12 -16 GHz spectrum of lemon oil). This instrument can record broadband microwave spectra at comparable sensitivity to high Q cavity spectrometers which use pulsed supersonic jets, but up to 3000 times faster with a modest increase in sample consumption rate.
Many achiral molecules can be made chiral by appropriate positioning of an isotope. Accurate detection of this type of chirality has remained elusive, and there is as yet no general method for detection of isotopically chiral species. Here, we present the first application of microwave three-wave mixing to isotopically chiral molecules, detecting enantiomeric excess in (R/S)-benzyl-α-D1 alcohol. Our method is expected to be applicable to a broad range of isotopically chiral molecules with a prochiral parent species.
We present a new algorithm, Robust Automated Assignment of Rigid Rotors (RAARR), for assigning rotational spectra of asymmetric tops. The RAARR algorithm can automatically assign experimental spectra under a broad range of conditions, including spectra comprised of multiple mixture components, in ≲100 s. The RAARR algorithm exploits constraints placed by the conservation of energy to find sets of connected lines in an unassigned spectrum. The highly constrained structure of these sets eliminates all but a handful of plausible assignments for a given set, greatly reducing the number of potential assignments that must be evaluated. We successfully apply our algorithm to automatically assign 15 experimental spectra, including 5 previously unassigned species, without prior estimation of molecular rotational constants. In 9 of the 15 cases, the RAARR algorithm successfully assigns two or more mixture components.
Isoprene (2-methyl-1,3-butadiene) is highly abundant in the atmosphere, second only to methane in hydrocarbon emissions. In contrast to the most stable trans rotamer, structural characterization of gauche-isoprene has proven challenging: it is weakly polar, present at the level of only a few percent at room temperature, and structurally complex due to both torsional and methyl tunneling motions. gauche-Isoprene has been observed by two distinct but complementary experimental approaches: chirped-pulse Fourier transform microwave (CP-FTMW) spectroscopy coupled with cryogenic buffer gas cooling, and cavity-enhanced FTMW spectroscopy with a pulsed discharge source. Thermal enhancement of the gauche population (from 1.7% to 10.3%) was observed in the cryogenic buffer gas cell when the sample was preheated from 300 to 450 K, demonstrating that high-energy rotamers can be efficiently isolated under our experimental conditions. Rotational parameters for the inversion states (0+/0–) have been determined for the first time, aided by calculations at increasing levels of theoretical sophistication. From this combined analysis, the inversion splitting ΔE and the F bc Coriolis coupling constant between the two inversion states have been derived.
We demonstrate for the first time high-precision differential microwave spectroscopy, achieving sub-Hz precision by coupling a cryogenic buffer gas cell with a tunable microwave Fabry–Perot cavity. We report statistically limited sub-Hz precision of (0.08 ± 0.72) Hz, observed between enantiopure samples of (R)-1,2-propanediol and (S)-1,2-propanediol at frequencies near 15 GHz. We confirm highly repeatable spectroscopic measurements compared to traditional pulsed-jet methods, opening up new capabilities in probing subtle molecular structural effects at the 10−10 level and providing a platform for exploring sources of systematic error in parity-violation searches. We discuss dominant systematic effects at this level and propose possible extensions of the technique for higher precision.
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