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High-Resolution Spectroscopy of Transient Molecules
β Scribed by Professor Eizi Hirota Ph.D. (auth.)
- Publisher
- Springer-Verlag Berlin Heidelberg
- Year
- 1985
- Tongue
- English
- Leaves
- 244
- Series
- Springer Series in Chemical Physics 40
- Edition
- 1
- Category
- Library
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
It is a great challenge in chemistry to clarify every detail of reaction processes. In older days chemists mixed starting materials in a flask and took the resulΒ tants out of it after a while, leaving all the intermediate steps uncleared as a sort of black box. One had to be content with only changing temperature and pressure to accelerate or decelerate chemical reactions, and there was almost no hope of initiating new reactions. However, a number of new techniques and new methods have been introduced and have provided us with a clue to the examination of the black box of chemical reaction. Flash photolysis, which was invented in the 1950s, is such an example; this method has been combined with high-resolution electronic spectroscopy with photographic recording of the spectra to provide a large amount of precise and detailed data on transient molecules which occur as intermediates during the course of chemical reacΒ tions. In 1960 a fundamentally new light source was devised, i. e. , the laser. When the present author and coworkers started high-resolution spectroscopic studΒ ies of transient molecules at a new research institute, the Institute for MolecuΒ lar Science in Okazaki in 1975, the time was right to exploit this new light source and its microwave precursor in order to shed light on the black box.
β¦ Table of Contents
Front Matter....Pages I-IX
Introduction....Pages 1-4
Theoretical Aspects of High-Resolution Molecular Spectra....Pages 5-73
Experimental Details....Pages 74-118
Individual Molecules....Pages 119-200
Applications and Future Prospects....Pages 201-212
Back Matter....Pages 213-236
β¦ Subjects
Spectroscopy/Spectrometry;Spectroscopy and Microscopy;Atomic, Molecular, Optical and Plasma Physics;Physical Chemistry
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