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. 2019 Oct 9;21(39):21960-21965.
doi: 10.1039/c9cp03465j.

The ground state of KO revisited: the millimeter and submillimeter spectrum of potassium oxide

Affiliations

The ground state of KO revisited: the millimeter and submillimeter spectrum of potassium oxide

Mark A Burton et al. Phys Chem Chem Phys. .

Abstract

The millimeter/sub-millimeter spectrum of the KO radical has been recorded in the frequency range 90-534 GHz using direct absorption methods. The radical was synthesized by reacting potassium vapor, produced with a Broida-type oven, with either N2O or O2 mixed in argon carrier gas. Twenty-seven rotational transitions of KO were measured, each exhibiting a doublet structure with a relatively small splitting (∼100-200 MHz) that increased noticeably with frequency. A perturbation was apparent in the rotational lines at energies above ∼120 cm-1, which was more prominent in one doublet component. The data were successfully fit with a Hund's case (c) Hamiltonian, assuming that spectra arise from a 2Πi state, and rotational and effective lambda-doubling constants were determined. Higher order centrifugal distortion terms were needed to account for the perturbation. The spectra could also be fit as a 2Σ+ ground state, but less successfully, and the resulting rotational constant of B = 8235.4 MHz disagreed significantly with that predicted by theory. On the basis of the experimental data, the ground electronic state of KO has been assigned as 2Πi, although the 2Σ+ assignment cannot be entirely ruled out.

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