Water molecules trapped in rare gas matrices exhibit conspicuous shifts in their far-infrared (FIR), rotranslational spectral features compared with the corresponding transitions observed in the gas phase. These confinement-induced perturbations have been related not only to the quantization of translational motion but also to the coupling between the orientational and positional degrees of freedom: the rotation-translation coupling (RTC). As the propensity displayed by the nuclear spin isomers (NSI) of water to undergo interconversion in confinement is intimately related to how its nuclear spin degrees of freedom are coupled with those for intra- and intermolecular motions, confinement-induced RTC should also strongly impact the NSI interconversion mechanisms and rates. Insight into the rotranslational dynamics for H O, H O, and H O, confined in argon and krypton matrices, is provided here based on the evolution of rotranslational spectra induced by NSI interconversion while a definitive assignment is provided from the transition energies and intensities calculated using the confined rotor model [Paper I, Wespiser et al., J. Chem. Phys. 156, 074304 (2021)]. In order to build a complete rotranslational energy diagram of confined water, which is fundamental to understand the NSI interconversion rates, the energy difference between the ground ortho and para rotranslational states is derived from the temperature dependence of the intensity ratio of mid-infrared lines emerging from these states. These investigations should provide deeper insight of the factors that control NSI interconversion of water isotopologues under extreme confinement.

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Water molecules trapped in rare gas matrices exhibit conspicuous shifts in their far-infrared (FIR), rotranslational spectral features compared with the corresponding transitions observed in the gas phase. These confinement-induced perturbations have been related not only to the quantization of translational motion but also to the coupling between the orientational and positional degrees of freedom: the rotation-translation coupling (RTC). As the propensity displayed by the nuclear spin isomers (NSI) of water to undergo interconversion in confinement is intimately related to how its nuclear spin degrees of freedom are coupled with those for intra- and intermolecular motions, confinement-induced RTC should also strongly impact the NSI interconversion mechanisms and rates.

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Magnetic focusing of a molecular beam formed from a rotationally cooled supersonic jet of HO seeded in argon is shown to yield water vapor highly enriched in the -HO nuclear spin isomer (NSI). Rotationally resolved resonance-enhanced multiphoton ionization time-of-flight mass spectrometry demonstrates that this methodology enables the preparation of a beam of water molecules enriched to >98% in the -HO NSI, that is, having an ortho-to-para ratio in excess of 50:1. The flux and quantum-state purity achieved through the methodology described herein could enable heterogeneous chemistry applications including the preparation of nuclear spin-polarized water adlayers, making nuclear magnetic resonance investigations amenable to surface science studies, as well as laboratory astrophysics investigations of NSI interconversion mechanisms and rates in ice and at its surface.

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Article Synopsis
  • The interconversion process between the nuclear spin isomers (NSI) of water (HO) is not fully understood, but recent findings suggest that the environment, particularly when HO is trapped in an argon matrix, significantly affects the rates of this process.
  • The faster interconversion rates in confined environments compared to gas phase conditions hint at new ways for o-HO (ortho-water) to convert to p-HO (para-water) in complex compounds.
  • Understanding these mechanisms can enhance methods for separating and storing NSIs, which is useful for applications like magnetic resonance spectroscopy and studying conditions in space.
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