Abstract

The equilibrium structure of selenophenol has been investigated using rotational spectroscopy and high-level quantum mechanical calculations, offering electronic and structural insight into the scarcely studied selenium compounds. The jet-cooled broadband microwave spectrum was measured in the 2-8GHz cm-wave region using broadband (chirped-pulse) fast-passage techniques. Additional measurements up to 18GHz used narrow-band impulse excitation. Spectral signatures were obtained for six isotopic species of selenium (80Se, 78Se, 76Se, 82Se, 77Se, and 74Se), together with different monosubstituted 13C species. The (unsplit) rotational transitions associated with the non-inverting μa-dipole selection rules could be partially reproduced with a semirigid rotor model. However, the internal rotation barrier of the selenol group splits the vibrational ground state into two subtorsional levels, doubling the dipole-inverting μb transitions. The simulation of the double-minimum internal rotation gives a very low barrier height (B3PW91: 42cm-1), much smaller than for thiophenol (277cm-1). A monodimensional Hamiltonian then predicts a huge vibrational separation of 72.2GHz, justifying the non-observation of μb transitions in our frequency range. The experimental rotational parameters were compared with different MP2 and density functional theory calculations. The equilibrium structure was determined using several high-level abinitio calculations. A final Born-Oppenheimer (reBO) structure was obtained at the coupled-cluster CCSD(T)_ae/cc-wCVTZ level of theory, including small corrections for the wCVTZ → wCVQZ basis set enlargement calculated at the MP2 level. The mass-dependent method with predicates was used to produce an alternative rm(2) structure. The comparison between the two methods confirms the high accuracy of the reBO structure and offers information on other chalcogen-containing molecules.

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