scholarly journals Rotationally Resolved Rate Constant Measurements for Removal of CH(A2Δ and B2∑−) by Ketene

1994 ◽  
Vol 14 (4) ◽  
pp. 207-216 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jorge Luque ◽  
Javier Ruiz ◽  
Margarita Martin

Rate constants for total removal of CH(A2Δ) and CH(B2∑−) in collisions with ketene were measured. For the A2Δ state, rate constants increased with vibrational quantum number; measured values were (4.5 ± 0.5) × 10-10 cm3 molec-1 s-1 and (8.0 ± 1) × 10-01 cm3 molec-1 s-1 for v′ = 0 and v′ = 2 respectively. For v′ = 0, rotational levels with quantum numbers from N′ = 4 to N′ = 16 were removed with similar rates within experimental errors; collisional disappearance of levels with higher rotational quantum numbers was faster for a factor of about 1.4. Calculations of cross sections for ketene and other fast colliders, assuming a multipole model, obtained a qualitative correlation with experimental values. CH(B2∑−) was more efficiently removed than CH(A2Δ, v′ = 0); for the lowest rotational levels a rate constant of (5.8 ± 0.3) × 10-10 cm3 molec-1 s-1 was measured and a moderate increase with rotational quantum number was observed.

1999 ◽  
Vol 29 (3) ◽  
pp. 372-381 ◽  
Author(s):  
Erik Næsset

Decomposition rate constants were estimated from 384 cross sections of Norway spruce (Picea abies (L.) Karst.) logs with base diameter >7.0 cm collected in open areas at five different study sites in southeastern Norway. Fresh wood core samples were taken from 95 standing trees adjacent to the logs to estimate the initial density of these cross sections. Based on this chronosequence, a simple negative exponential function of time showed an average decomposition rate constant for all cross sections of 0.033 per year. Cross-section diameter, ground contact, soil moisture, and aspect were all found to have significant impacts on the decomposition rate constant. For different combinations of these characteristics the decomposition rate constant ranged from a minimum of 0.0165 per year to a maximum of 0.0488 per year.


Gas-phase dissociation of fluorine ( 1 Ʃ + g ) molecules in an agron bath at 3000 K was studied by using the 3D Monte Carlo classical trajectory (3DMCCT) method. To assess the importance of the potential energy surface (PES) in such calculations, three surfaces, with a fixed, experimentally determined F 2 dissociation energy, were constructed. These surfaces span the existing experimental uncertainties in the shape of the F 2 potential. The first potential was the widest and softest; in the second potential the anharmonicity was minimized. The intermediate potential was constructed to ‘localize’ anharmonicity in the energy range in which the collisions are most reactive. The remaining parameters for each PES were estimated from the best available data on interatomic potentials. By using the single uniform ensemble (SUE) method (Kutz, H. D. & Burns, G. J. chem. Phys . 72, 3652-3657 (1980)), large ensembles of trajectories (LET) were generated for the PES. Two such ensembles consisted of 30000 trajectories each and the third of 26200. It was found that the computed one-way-flux equilibrium rate coefficients (Widom, B. Science 148, 1555-1560 (1965)) depend in a systematic way upon the anharmonicity of the potential, with the most anharmonic potential yielding the largest rate coefficient. Steady-state reaction-rate constants, which correspond to experimentally observable rate constants, were calculated by the SUE method. It was determined that this method yields (for a given trajectory ensemble, PES and translational temperature) a unique steady-state rate constant, independent of the initial, arbitrarily chosen, state (Tolman, R. C. The principles of statistical mechanics , p. 17. Oxford University Press (1938)) of the LET, and consequently independent of the corresponding initial value of the reaction rate coefficient. For each initial state of the LET, the development of the steady-state rate constant from the equilibrium rate coefficient was smooth, monotonic, and consistent with the detailed properties of the PES. It was found that, although the increased anharmonicity of the F 2 potential enhanced the equilibrium rate coefficients, it also enhanced the non-equilibrium effects. As a result, the steady-state rate constants were found to be insensitive to the variation of the PES. Thus, the differences among the steady-state rate constants for the three potentials were of the order of their standard errors, which was about 15% or less. On the other hand, the calculated rate constants exceeded the experimental rate constant by a factor of five to six. Because within the limitations of classical mechanics the calculations were ab initio , it was tentatively concluded that the discrepancy of five to six is due to the use of classical mechanics rather than details of the PES structure.


2012 ◽  
Vol 90 (3) ◽  
pp. 256-261 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jiawu Chen ◽  
Xinguo Liu ◽  
Qinggang Zhang

The vector correlations between products and reagents for the ion–molecule reaction O+ + D2 → OD+ + D with different rotational quantum numbers (j = 0, 1, or 2) were explored theoretically using the quasi-classical trajectory method (QCT) on a Martìnez–Millán–González (MMG) surface. The three angular distributions P(θr), P([Formula: see text]), and P(θr,[Formula: see text]), as well as four polarization-dependent differential cross sections (PDDCSs) were calculated. The results indicate that a reagent’s rotational excitation greatly influences both the vector correlations of k–k′, k–j′, and k–k′–j′ and the PDDCSs of the title reaction, which means the reactivity is very sensitive to the rotational quantum number.


Author(s):  
Na Li ◽  
Hong Zhang ◽  
Xing-Lu Cheng

Abstract We present a state-to-state dynamical calculation on the exchange reaction N+N2→N2+N and the non-reaction N+N2→N+N2 based on the potential energy surface published by Mankodi et al. The calculation is performed using the time-independent quantum reaction scattering program. The reactivity of both reaction processes is discussed by reaction properties of vibrational quantum numbers v=0-3 and rotational quantum numbers j=0-32 (such as cumulative reaction probability, state-to-state reaction probabilities, and cross sections of N exchange, state-to-state rate constants for both reactions). The threshold energy of the exchange reaction can decrease with the decrease of vibrational excitation or the increase of rotational excitation. By using the J-shifting approximation, rate constants are reported for both reactions. The comparison of the presented total rate constant of the N+N2 exchange reaction with the previous results shows that the quantum effect is not negligible at low temperatures. For the exchange reaction, the rate constant at 500K decreases by about 10 orders of magnitude when the vibrational level of N2 increases from 0 to 7, indicating that the rate constants are sensitive to the initial vibrational level of N2 at low temperatures. For non-reactive collisions, the rate constants have little effect on the initial ro-vibrational levels of N2 at low temperatures.


2020 ◽  
Vol 22 (4) ◽  
pp. 2549-2556 ◽  
Author(s):  
Pan Jiang ◽  
Xiaoping Chi ◽  
Qihe Zhu ◽  
Min Cheng ◽  
Hong Gao

Partial predissociation rate constants into each individual channel and their dependence on the rotational quantum number are obtained, revealing unprecedented details for the predissociation dynamics of CO.


1987 ◽  
Vol 42 (12) ◽  
pp. 1399-1401 ◽  
Author(s):  
A. Kiermeier ◽  
H. J. Neusser ◽  
E.W. Schlag

We present the first example of unimolecular decay rates of a polyatomic system in which reactants are rotational state selected. Highly excited, but internal energy selected and J rotational quantum number selected benzene cations are produced in a two laser pump-pump experiment. Slow reactive decay of these ions is observed in a reflectron time-of-flight mass spectrometer and the total decay rate constant k(E, J ) is measured as a function of J. At constant internal energy E, k(E, J) decreases with increasing J.


1966 ◽  
Vol 44 (10) ◽  
pp. 2411-2430 ◽  
Author(s):  
C. G. Gray ◽  
J. Van Kranendonk

The impact theory of Raman line broadening is applied to the broadening of the rotational Raman lines of diatomic molecules arising from electric multipole and anisotropic dispersion forces. Expressions are derived for the elastic and inelastic optical cross sections, and these are evaluated for the self-broadening in N2, O2, CO, and CO2, using values of the molecular constants obtained from sources independent of the line-broadening experiments. Included in the calculations are the "time", or "resonant", factors in the optical cross sections, and the resulting time integrals are explicitly evaluated for arbitrary multipole interactions, and anisotropic dispersion forces of second and fourth degree in the orientations. The overall agreement between the theoretical and experimental values of the magnitude of the half-widths is satisfactory, but a discrepancy appears in the variation of the broadening with the rotational quantum number. Possible explanations of this discrepancy are suggested in view of the results on foreign-gas broadening by monatomic gases.


The work of multilayer glass structures for central and eccentric compression and bending are considered. The substantiation of the chosen research topic is made. The description and features of laminated glass for the structures investigated, their characteristics are presented. The analysis of the results obtained when testing for compression, compression with bending, simple bending of models of columns, beams, samples of laminated glass was made. Overview of the types and nature of destruction of the models are presented, diagrams of material operation are constructed, average values of the resistance of the cross-sections of samples are obtained, the table of destructive loads is generated. The need for development of a set of rules and guidelines for the design of glass structures, including laminated glass, for bearing elements, as well as standards for testing, rules for assessing the strength, stiffness, crack resistance and methods for determining the strength of control samples is emphasized. It is established that the strength properties of glass depend on the type of applied load and vary widely, and significantly lower than the corresponding normative values of the strength of heat-strengthened glass. The effect of the connecting polymeric material and manufacturing technology of laminated glass on the strength of the structure is also shown. The experimental values of the elastic modulus are different in different directions of the cross section and in the direction perpendicular to the glass layers are two times less than along the glass layers.


1983 ◽  
Vol 48 (5) ◽  
pp. 1358-1367 ◽  
Author(s):  
Antonín Tockstein ◽  
František Skopal

A method for constructing curves is proposed that are linear in a wide region and from whose slopes it is possible to determine the rate constant, if a parameter, θ, is calculated numerically from a rapidly converging recurrent formula or from its explicit form. The values of rate constants and parameter θ thus simply found are compared with those found by an optimization algorithm on a computer; the deviations do not exceed ±10%.


1999 ◽  
Vol 64 (4) ◽  
pp. 585-594 ◽  
Author(s):  
Barbara Marczewska

The acceleration effect of p-toluidine on the electroreduction of Zn(II) on the mercury electrode surface in binary mixtures water-methanol and water-dimethylformamide is discussed. The obtained apparent and true forward rate constants of Zn(II) reduction indicate that the rate constant of the first electron transfer increases in the presence of p-toluidine. The acceleration effect may probably be accounted for by the concept of the formation on the mercury electrode an activated complex, presumably composed of p-toluidine and solvent molecules.


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