Superhydrogenated Polycyclic Aromatic Hydrocarbon Molecules: Vibrational Spectra in the Infrared
X.J. Yang, Aigen Li, R. Glaser

TL;DR
This study uses computational methods to analyze the vibrational spectra of superhydrogenated PAHs, concluding that such molecules are mostly aromatic with minimal superhydrogenation, which impacts their infrared emission features.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed computational analysis of vibrational spectra of superhydrogenated PAHs across various sizes and hydrogenation levels, linking spectral features to hydrogenation degree.
Findings
Superhydrogenation degree is about 2.2% for neutral PAHs.
Superhydrogenation degree is less than 3.1% for neutrals and 8.6% for cations.
Astrophysical PAHs are predominantly aromatic with minimal superhydrogenation.
Abstract
Superhydrogenated polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs) may be present in H-rich and ultraviolet-poor benign regions. The addition of excess H atoms to PAHs converts the aromatic bonds into aliphatic bonds, the strongest of which falls near 3.4 m. Therefore, superhydrogenated PAHs are often hypothesized as a carrier of the 3.4 m emission feature which typically accompanies the stronger 3.3 m aromatic C--H stretching feature. To assess this hypothesis, we use density function theory to compute the IR vibrational spectra of superhydrogenated PAHs and their ions of various sizes (ranging from benzene, naphthalene to perylene and coronene) and of various degrees of hydrogenation (ranging from minimal hydrogenation to heavy hydrogenation). For each molecule, we derive the intrinsic oscillator strengths of the 3.3 m aromatic C--H stretch () and the 3.4 m…
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