Abstract
The absorption spectrum of CO2 in the wavelength range 120-160 nm is analyzed by means of quantum mechanical calculations performed using vibronically coupled potential energy surfaces of five singlet valence electronic states and the coordinate dependent transition dipole moment vectors. The thermally averaged spectrum, calculated for T = 190 K via Boltzmann averaging of optical transitions from many initial rotational states, accurately reproduces the experimental spectral envelope, consisting of a low and a high energy band, the positions of the absorption maxima, their FWHMs, peak intensities, and frequencies of diffuse structures in each band. Contributions of the vibronic interactions due to Renner-Teller coupling, conical intersections, and the Herzberg-Teller effect are isolated and the calculated bands are assigned in terms of adiabatic electronic states. Finally, diffuse structures in the calculated bands are vibronically assigned using wave functions of the underlying resonance states. It is demonstrated that the main progressions in the high energy band correspond to consecutive excitations of the pseudorotational motion along the closed loop of the CI seam, and progressions differ in the number of nodes along the radial mode perpendicular to the closed seam. Irregularity of the diffuse peaks in the low energy band is interpreted as a manifestation of the carbene-type "cyclic" OCO minimum.
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