Abstract

The production of H(2) in highly excited vibrational and rotational states (v=0-5, J=0-17) from the 157 nm photodissociation of amorphous solid water ice films at 100 K was observed directly using resonance-enhanced multiphoton ionization. Weaker signals from H(2)(v=2,3 and 4) were obtained from 157 nm photolysis of polycrystalline ice, but H(2)(v=0 and 1) populations in this case were below the detection limit. The H(2) products show two distinct formation mechanisms. Endothermic abstraction of a hydrogen atom from H(2)O by a photolytically produced H atom yields vibrationally cold H(2) products, whereas exothermic recombination of two H-atom photoproducts yields H(2) molecules with a highly excited vibrational distribution and non-Boltzmann rotational population distributions as has been predicted previously by both quantum-mechanical and molecular dynamics calculations.

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