We present high-density experimental and theoretical results on CO2---Ar gas-phase absorption in the ν3 and 3ν3 infrared bands. Measurements have been made at room temperature for pressures up to 1000 bar in both the central and wing regions of the bands. A non-linear perturber density dependence of the absorption, clearly shown in the far wing, is attributed to the finite volume of the molecules. Furthermore, experiments show vibrational dephasing and narrowing effects. We have performed line-mixing computations based on the Energy Corrected Sudden approximation (ECS impact model). Significant discrepancies between experimental and calculated spectra appear when pressure increases. We then tested the influence of the finite duration of collision by using interpolations between ECS and quasi-static calculations, and we have evaluated the sensitivity of the band profiles to the interbranch mixing effects. Finally, an effective width is used in order to take other effects into account.
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Measurements of absorption coefficients in the 3v3 band of CO2 at 1.44 μm perturbed by Ar up to 146 bar have been analyzed by using two line-mixing theoretical calculations within the impact approximation. In the first approach, the relaxation operator is treated semi-classically with adiabatic corrections. In the second, the relaxation operator is modelled with the Energy Corrected Sudden (ECS) approximation associated with a power fitting law providing the basic rotational state-to-state rates. Although the line-coupling spectroscopic cross-sections of the two models are significantly different, they both lead to satisfactory agreement with bandshapes at moderate densities (< 100 Amagat). Significant deviations between experimental and calculated spectra appear at higher densities. They are mainly attributed to the probable breakdown of the impact and binary collision approximations and to a number of reasons including an incorrect ECS calculation of the interbranch coupling, the nonlinear density dependence due to the finite volume of the molecules, and the neglect of the unknown imaginary part of the off-diagonal elements in the calculated relaxation matrix.