Atmospheric electron–ion and ion–ion recombination processes

1969 ◽  
Vol 47 (10) ◽  
pp. 1711-1719 ◽  
Author(s):  
Manfred A. Biondi

The electron–ion and ion–ion recombination processes of importance in the upper atmosphere are considered, and available laboratory experimental and theoretical information concerning the relevant processes is discussed. For atomic ions the principal electron–ion recombination process is radiative, with theory indicating that the two-body coefficient at ∼200 °K is ∼10−11 cm3/s and decreases with increasing electron temperature. Microwave afterglow/mass spectrometer studies of diatomic ionospheric ions (e.g. NO+, O2+, and N2+) show a loss by dissociative recombination with a coefficient substantially in excess of 10−7 cm3/s at 250 °K and decreasing with increasing electron and ion temperature. There is some evidence from flame studies that H3O+ ions exhibit a very large coefficient (10−6–10−5 cm3/s) at 300 °K. Ion–ion recombination evidently proceeds by mutual neutralization, with laboratory studies of ions such as NO+ and NO2− indicating a two-body coefficient of the order of 10−7 cm3/s at 300 °K. In the lower D region, three-body Thomson recombination may be important, since laboratory studies of "air" ions indicate a three-body coefficient of ∼2 × 10−25 cm6/s at 300 °K.

2021 ◽  
Vol 4 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Fuyang Zhou ◽  
Yizhi Qu ◽  
Junwen Gao ◽  
Yulong Ma ◽  
Yong Wu ◽  
...  

AbstractAn ion embedded in warm/hot dense plasmas will greatly alter its microscopic structure and dynamics, as well as the macroscopic radiation transport properties of the plasmas, due to complicated many-body interactions with surrounding particles. Accurate theoretically modeling of such kind of quantum many-body interactions is essential but very challenging. In this work, we propose an atomic-state-dependent screening model for treating the plasmas with a wide range of temperatures and densities, in which the contributions of three-body recombination processes are included. We show that the electron distributions around an ion are strongly correlated with the ionic state studied due to the contributions of three-body recombination processes. The feasibility and validation of the proposed model are demonstrated by reproducing the experimental result of the line-shift of hot-dense plasmas as well as the classical molecular dynamic simulations of moderately coupled ultra-cold neutral plasmas. Our work opens a promising way to treat the screening effect of hot and warm dense plasma, which is a bottleneck of those extensive studies in high-energy-density physics, such as atomic processes in plasma, plasma spectra and radiation transport properties, among others.


2020 ◽  
pp. 241-250
Author(s):  
M. Hamberg ◽  
E. Vigren ◽  
R. D. Thomas ◽  
V. Zhaunerchyk ◽  
M. Zhang ◽  
...  

1970 ◽  
Vol 48 (4) ◽  
pp. 598-602 ◽  
Author(s):  
D. E. Wilson ◽  
D. A. Armstrong

Rates of ion neutralization have been measured in hydrogen chloride, hydrogen bromide, and nitrous oxide by collecting the ions remaining in a defined volume at various times after ionization by a pulse of 120 k.v.p. X-rays. Values of the total homogeneous ion-ion recombination coefficient, a, have been obtained for each gas over a range of pressures in the region 50 to 650 Torr. From a study of the effects of pressure and ion density, the relative rates of wall diffusion, mutual neutralization, and three-body neutralization have been deduced.


Author(s):  
Li-Jun Dou ◽  
Lu-You Xie ◽  
Zhong-Kui Huang ◽  
Wei-Qiang Wen ◽  
Deng-Hong Zhang ◽  
...  

The ions present in flames of H 2 +O 2 + N 2 with trace quantities of an alkaline earth M ( = Ca or Sr) added to them have been studied mass spectrometrieally. Those detected were principally MOH + and M + , the only negatively charged species being the free electron. It was established that the reaction M + +H 2 O = MOH + +H was rapid enough to be balanced everywhere in a flame. Detailed studies of (I) provided a means for measuring the concentration of hydrogen atoms at the point of sampling in the flame from observations of [M + ]/[MOH + ]. It proved possible to make absolute determinations of [H]. In addition, the ionization potentials of CaOH and SrOH were measured as 5.7 ± 0.3 and 5.4 ± 0.3 eV, which values are slightly less than those for the corresponding alkaline earth atoms. Hydrates of MOH + and M + were observed, but it was concluded that ion-hydration is not an important flame process in this case, but rather one associated with cooling of gases as they are sampled into the mass spectrometer. It appears that molecular ions hydrate in a two-body process, e. g. MOH + + H 2 O → MOH + . H 2 O with a velocity constant, which is independent of temperature and approximately 1 x 10 –10 ml molecule –1 s –1 . Atomic ions on the other hand initially undergo hydration by a slower three-body step requiring a chaperon molecule. The first hydration energies at absolute zero for CaOH + and SrOH + were measured to be 120±20 and 109±15 kJ mol –1 respectively. These exceed the corresponding quantities for Ca + and Sr + , which were found to be 75±16 and 60±16 kJ mol –1 .


2007 ◽  
Vol 98 (22) ◽  
Author(s):  
V. Zhaunerchyk ◽  
W. D. Geppert ◽  
M. Larsson ◽  
R. D. Thomas ◽  
E. Bahati ◽  
...  

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