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Tunneling rotation torsional vibrational splitting

Torsional barriers are referred to as n-fold barriers, where the torsional potential function repeats every 2n/n radians. As in the case of inversion vibrations (Section 6.2.5.4a) quantum mechanical tunnelling through an n-fold torsional barrier may occur, splitting a vibrational level into n components. The splitting into two components near the top of a twofold barrier is shown in Figure 6.45. When the barrier is surmounted free internal rotation takes place, the energy levels then resembling those for rotation rather than vibration. [Pg.192]


See other pages where Tunneling rotation torsional vibrational splitting is mentioned: [Pg.114]    [Pg.210]    [Pg.307]    [Pg.114]    [Pg.168]    [Pg.97]    [Pg.3189]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.210 , Pg.211 , Pg.212 , Pg.213 , Pg.214 , Pg.215 , Pg.216 , Pg.217 , Pg.218 , Pg.219 , Pg.220 , Pg.221 ]




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Rotatable torsions

Rotation-vibration

Rotational tunneling

Rotational tunneling splittings

Rotational tunnelling

Rotational vibrations

Rotational-vibrational

Torsion vibrations

Torsion vibrations tunneling rotation

Torsional rotation

Torsional vibration

Tunnel splitting

Tunneling rotation

Tunneling splitting

Vibrating rotator

Vibration rotation tunnelling

Vibration-rotational-tunneling

Vibrational splittings

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