Pirani F, Cappelletti D, Bartolomei M, Aquilanti V, Scotoni M, Vescovi M, Ascenzi D, Bassi D
Dipartimento di Chimica and Dipartimento di Ingegneria Civile ed Ambientale, Università di Perugia, 060123-Perugia, Italy.
Phys Rev Lett. 2001 May 28;86(22):5035-8. doi: 10.1103/PhysRevLett.86.5035.
This work represents the first experimental demonstration that planar molecules tend to travel as a "frisbee" when a gaseous mixture with lighter carriers expands into a vacuum, the orientation being due to collisions. The molecule is benzene, the prototype of aromatic chemistry. The demonstration is via two complementary experiments: interrogating benzene by IR-laser light and controlling its orientation by selective scattering on rare gas targets. The results cast new light on the microscopic mechanisms of collisional alignment and suggest a useful way to produce intense beams of aligned molecules, permitting studies of steric effects in gas-phase processes and in surface catalysis.