Parity violation (PV) effects in chiral molecules have so far never been experimentally observed. To take up this challenge, a consortium of physicists, chemists, theoreticians, and spectroscopists has been established and aims at measuring PV energy differences between two enantiomers by using high-resolution laser spectroscopy. In this article, we present our common strategy to reach this goal, the progress accomplished in the diverse areas, and point out directions for future PV observations. The work of André Collet on bromochlorofluoromethane (1) enantiomers, their synthesis, and their chiral recognition by cryptophanes made feasible the first generation of experiments presented in this article.
A series of hydrogen bonded complexes involving oxirane and water molecules have been studied. In this paper we report on the vibrational study of the oxirane-water complex (CH(2))(2)O-H(2)O. Neon matrix experiments and ab initio anharmonic vibrational calculations have been performed, providing a consistent set of vibrational frequencies and anharmonic coupling constants. The implementation of a new large flow supersonic jet coupled to the Bruker IFS 125 HR spectrometer at the infrared AILES beamline of the French synchrotron SOLEIL (Jet-AILES) enabled us to record first jet-cooled Fourier transform infrared spectra of oxirane-water complexes at different resolutions down to 0.2 cm(-1). Rovibrational parameters and a lower bound of the predissociation lifetime of 25 ps for the v(OH)(b) = 1 state have been derived from the rovibrational analysis of the ν(OH)(b) band contour recorded at respective rotational temperatures of 12 K (Jet-AILES) and 35 K (LADIR jet).
Fourier transform infrared spectra of the nu(s) (HF stretching) band of the (CH(2))(2)S-HF complex have been recorded at 0.1-0.5 cm(-1) resolution in a cooled cell, in a supersonic jet expansion seeded with argon and in a neon matrix at 4.5 K. The combination of controlled temperature effects over a range of 40-250 K and a sophisticated band contour simulation program allows the separation of homogeneous and inhomogeneous contributions and reveals significant anharmonic couplings between intramolecular and intermolecular vibrational modes similar to our previous work on (CH(2))(2)S-DF. The sign of the coupling constants is consistent with the expected strengthening of the hydrogen bond upon vibrational excitation of HF which also explains the observed small variations of the geometrical parameters in the excited state. The analysis of sum and difference combination bands involving nu(s) provides accurate values of intermolecular harmonic frequencies and anharmonicities and a good estimate of the dissociation energy of the complex. Frequencies and coupling parameters derived from gas phase spectra compare well with results from neon matrix experiments. The effective linewidth provides a lower bound for the predissociation lifetime of 10 ps. The comparison between effective linewidths and vibrational densities of states for (CH(2))(2)S-HF and -DF complexes highlights the important role of intramolecular vibrational redistribution in the vibrational dynamics of medium strength hydrogen bonds.
CHFClI is among the more favorable molecules for parity violation (PV) measurements in molecules. Despite the fact that calculated PV effects are two orders of magnitude smaller than in some organometallic compounds, CHFClI displays interesting features which could make possible a new experimental PV test on this molecule. Indeed, ultrahigh resolution spectroscopy using an ultrastable CO(2) laser is favored by several intrinsic properties of this molecule. For example, the high vapor pressure of CHFClI allows investigation by supersonic beam spectroscopy. Indeed, the spectroscopic constants have been accurately determined by microwave and millimetre wave spectroscopy. This is important for the subsequent selection of an appropriate absorption band of CHFClI that could be brought to coïncide with the absorption of CO(2). Partially resolved (+)- and (-)-CHFClI enantiomers with respectively 63.3 and 20.5% ee's have been recently prepared and analyzed by molecular recognition using chiral hosts called cryptophanes. Finally, the S-(+)/R-(-) absolute configuration was ascertained by vibrational circular dichroïsm (VCD) in the gas phase.
Using synchrotron radiation, we performed the rotationally resolved Fourier transform infrared absorption spectroscopy of three bands of naphthalene C10H8, namely ν(46)-0 (centered at 782 cm(-1), 12.7 μm), ν(47)-0 (centered at 474 cm(-1), 21 μm), and ν(48)-0 (centered at 167 cm(-1), 60 μm). The intense CH bending out of plane ν(46)-0 band was recorded under supersonic jet-cooled conditions using a molecular beam (the Jet-AILES apparatus) and the low frequency ν(47)-0 and ν(48)-0 bands were measured at room temperature in a long absorption path cell. The simultaneous rotational analysis of these bands permitted us to refine the ground state (GS) and ν(46) rotational spectroscopic constants and to provide the first sets of constants for the ν(47) and ν(48) modes. The experimental rotational constants were then used as reference data to calibrate theoretical models in order to provide new insights into the accuracy of anharmonic calculations. The B97-1 functional associated with the cc-pVTZ and ANO-RCC basis sets gave a consistent set of results, for rotational constants and fundamental frequencies. The data presented here pave the way for the search of naphthalene through its far-infrared spectrum in different objects of the interstellar medium.
Fourier transform infrared spectra of the nu(s) band of the (CH2)(2)S-DF complex have been recorded at 0.1-0.5 cm(-1) resolution in a cooled cell and in a supersonic jet expansion seeded with argon. A sufficient density of (CH(2))(2)S-DF heterodimers is produced by a double injection nozzle device, which limits the possibility of reaction between thiirane and DF before the expansion. The observation of partially resolved PQR branch structures at cell temperatures as high as 252 K indicates relatively small effective line widths, which allow a detailed analysis of the underlying vibrational couplings and of the structural properties of the complex. The analysis of cell and free jet spectra in the temperature range 50-250 K is performed with a software package for the simulation and fitting of multiple hot band progressions in asymmetric rotors. The analysis reveals that the three low frequency hydrogen-bond modes are strongly coupled to the DF stretch with anharmonic coupling constants, which indicates a strengthening of the hydrogen bond upon vibrational excitation of DF. Rovibrational parameters and a reliable upper bound for the homogeneous line width have been extracted.
Originating from the weak interaction, parity violation in chiral molecules has been considered as a possible origin of the biohomochirality. It was predicted in 1974 but has never been observed so far. Parity violation should lead to a very tiny frequency difference in the rovibrational spectra of the enantiomers of a chiral molecule. We have proposed to observe this predicted frequency difference using the two photon Ramsey fringes technique on a supersonic beam. Promising candidates for this experiment are chiral oxorhenium complexes, which present a large effect, can be synthesized in large quantity and enantiopure form, and can be seeded in a molecular beam. As a first step towards our objective, a detailed spectroscopic study of methyltrioxorhenium (MTO) has been undertaken. It is an ideal test molecule as the achiral parent molecule of chiral candidates for the parity violation experiment. For the 187 Re MTO isotopologue, a combined analysis of Fourier transform microwave and infrared spectra as well as ultra-high resolution CO 2 laser absorption spectra enabled the assignment of 28 rotational lines and 71 rovibrational lines, some of them with a resolved hyperfine structure. A set of spectroscopic parameters in the ground and first excited state, including hyperfine structure constants, was obtained for the ν as antisymmetric Re=O stretching mode of this molecule. This result validates the experimental approach to be followed once a chiral derivative of MTO will be synthesized, and shows the benefit of the combination of several spectroscopic techniques in different spectral regions, with different set-ups and resolutions. First high resolution spectra of jet-cooled MTO, obtained on the setup being developed for the observation of molecular parity violation, are shown, which constitutes a major step towards the targeted objective. † Supplementary information available in the ancillary file: Measured and fitted transition frequencies as well as spectroscopic constants.1
Fourier transform infrared spectra of the Vs stretching bands of HF and DF bonded to (CH2)2O have been recorded at 0.5 cm(-1) resolution in a cooled cell and in a supersonic expansion seeded with argon. The analysis of the congested spectra of this type of medium strength hydrogen bonded complexes exploits a combination of controlled temperature effects in the ranges 25-80 K and 200-300 K and a band contour simulation program accounting for homogeneous and inhomogeneous contributions. Significant anharmonic couplings between the donor stretch mode and three of the low frequency intermolecular modes are found to be responsible for the characteristic hot band patterns in the Vs fundamental region of cell spectra. A global analysis of sum and difference combination bands involving Vs provides reliable values of intermolecular frequencies, anharmonic coupling constants and a good estimate of the dissociation energy of the complex which compares favorably with ab initio results. The effective linewidth provides a lower bound for the predissociation lifetime of 1.5 ps for HF and 7 ps for DF containing complexes, respectively. The correlation between effective linewidths and vibrational densities of states for (CH2)2O-HF and -DF underlines the important role of intramolecular vibrational redistribution in the vibrational dynamics of these complexes while the lifetime decrease for HF (or DF) bonded to oxygenated cyclic ethers with respect to sulfured homologues might be explained by the change in the arrangement of the acid relative to the plane of the acceptor subunit.
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