Tetrafluoromethane CF is the most abundant perfluorocarbon in the atmosphere, where it is designated as PFC-14. This greenhouse gas is very stable, has an atmospheric lifetime of 50 000 years, and a high greenhouse warming potential 6500 times that of CO. Over the last 15 years, its atmospheric concentration has increased at a rate of 0.8 ppt per year. The accurate quantification of CF is key to understanding the contribution of its emissions to the radiative forcing budget, and the most precise spectroscopic parameters possible are hence required. In this study, a novel high finesse THz cavity, providing an interaction length in excess of 1 km, has enabled highly resolved spectra, and quantification of the weak transitions of CF by cavity ring-down spectroscopy (CRDS). More than 50 pure rotational - : - lines of CF have been measured, yielding both position and intensity with unequalled precision. Several tetrahedral splittings are fully resolved and measured with sub-MHz accuracy. Moreover, CRDS-THz allows determining absolute intensities and, using a global fit of the polyad series, a CF dipole parameter, namely , has been fitted to 106.38(53) mD. This value is in very good agreement with that of the -based parameter deduced from a dipole moment surface. For the first time, a set of effective dipole moment parameters is derived for the computation of the transitions of the type - ( = 0,…, 8) and the resulting line list composed of 25 863 transitions can be used to model the whole CF rotational spectrum. Finally, the TFMeCaSDa database is updated and is available for future spectroscopic and monitoring activities.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/d4cp00653d | DOI Listing |
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