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1.
A three-dimensional time-dependent quantum mechanical wave packet approach is used to calculate reaction probability (P(R)) and integral reaction cross section (sigma(R)) values for both the channels of the reaction He + HD(+) (v = 1; j = 0, 1, 2, 3) --> HeH(D)(+) + D(H), over a range of translational energy (E(trans)) on the McLaughlin-Thompson-Joseph-Sathyamurthy (MTJS) potential energy surface using centrifugal sudden approximation for nonzero total angular momentum (J) values. The reaction probability plots as a function of translational energy for different J values exhibit several oscillations, which are characteristic of the system. It is shown that HeH(+) is preferred over HeD(+) for large J values and that HeD(+) is preferred over HeH(+) for small J values for all the rotational (j) states studied. The integral reaction cross section for both the channels and therefore the isotopic branching ratio for the reaction depend strongly on j in contrast to the marginal dependence shown by earlier QCT calculations. The computed results are in overall agreement with the available experimental results.  相似文献   

2.
Time-independent quantum mechanical (TIQM) approach (helicity basis truncated at k = 2) has been used for computing differential and integral cross sections for the exchange reaction H- + D2 (v = 0, j = 0-4) --> HD + D- and D- + H2 (v = 0, j = 0-3) --> HD + H- in three dimensions on an accurate ab initio potential energy surface. It is shown that the j-weighted differential reaction cross section values are in good agreement with the experimental results reported by Zimmer and Linder at four different relative translational energies (Etrans = 0.55, 0.93, 1.16 and 1.48 eV) for (H-, D2) and at one relative translational energy (Etrans = 0.6 eV) by Haufler et al. for both (H-, D2) and (D-, H2) collisions. The j-weighted integral reaction cross section values are in good agreement with the crossed beam measurements by Zimmer and Linder in the Etrans range 0.5-1.5 eV and close to the guided ion beam results by Haufler et al. for (H-, D2) in the range 0.8-1.2 eV. Time-dependent quantum mechanical (TDQM) results obtained using centrifugal sudden approximation are reported in the form of integral reaction cross section values as a function of Etrans in the range 0.3-3.0 eV for both reactions in three dimensions on the same potential energy surface. The TDQM reaction cross section values decline more sharply than the TIQM results with increase in the initial rotational quantum number (j) for the D2 molecules in their ground vibrational state (v = 0) for (H-, D2) collisions. The computed j-weighted reaction cross section values are in good agreement with the experimental results reported by Zimmer and Linder for (H-, D2) collisions and guided ion beam results by Haufler et al. for both (H-, D2) and (D-, H2) collisions for energies below the threshold for electron detachment channel.  相似文献   

3.
Adiabatic (1A' or 1A' state) and non-adiabatic (2A'/1A' states) quantum dynamics calculations have been carried out for the title reaction (O((1)D) + D(2) → OD + D) to obtain the initial state-specified (v(i) = 0, j(i) = 0) integral cross section and rate constant using the potential energy surfaces of Dobbyn and Knowles. A total of 50 partial wave contributions have been calculated using the Chebyshev wave packet method with full Coriolis coupling to achieve convergence up to the collision energy of 0.28 eV. The total integral cross section and rate constant are in excellent agreement with experimental as well as quasi-classical trajectory results. Contributions from the adiabatic pathway of the 1A' state and the non-adiabatic pathway of the 2A'/1A' states, increase significantly with the collision energy. Compared to the O((1)D) + H(2) system, the kinetic isotope effect (k(D)/k(H)) is found to be nearly temperature independent above 100 K and its value of 0.77 ± 0.01 shows excellent agreement with the experimental result of 0.81.  相似文献   

4.
Time-dependent wave packet quantum scattering (TWQS) calculations are presented for HD(+) (v = 0 - 3;j(0)=1) + He collisions in the center-of-mass collision energy (E(T)) range of 0.0-2.0 eV. The present TWQS approach accounts for Coriolis coupling and uses the ab initio potential energy surface of Palmieri et al. [Mol. Phys. 98, 1839 (2000)]. For a fixed total angular momentum J, the energy dependence of reaction probabilities exhibits quantum resonance structure. The resonances are more pronounced for low J values and for the HeH(+) + D channel than for the HeD(+) + H channel and are particularly prominent near threshold. The quantum effects are no longer discernable in the integral cross sections, which compare closely to quasiclassical trajectory calculations conducted on the same potential energy surface. The integral cross sections also compare well to recent state-selected experimental values over the same reactant and translational energy range. Classical impulsive dynamics and steric arguments can account for the significant isotope effect in favor of the deuteron transfer channel observed for HD(+)(v<3) and low translational energies. At higher reactant energies, angular momentum constraints favor the proton-transfer channel, and isotopic differences in the integral cross sections are no longer significant. The integral cross sections as well as the J dependence of partial cross sections exhibit a significant alignment effect in favor of collisions with the HD(+) rotational angular momentum vector perpendicular to the Jacobi R coordinate. This effect is most pronounced for the proton-transfer channel at low vibrational and translational energies.  相似文献   

5.
A Regge pole analysis is employed to explain the oscillatory patterns observed in numerical simulations of integral cross section for the F+H(2)(v=0,j=0)-->HF(v(')=2,j(')=0)+H reaction in the translational collision energy range 25-50 meV. In this range the integral cross section for the transition, affected by two overlapping resonances, shows nearly sinusoidal oscillations below 38 meV and a more structured oscillatory pattern at larger energies. The two types of oscillations are related to the two Regge trajectories which (pseudo) cross near the energy where the resonances are aligned. Simple estimates are given for the periods of the oscillations.  相似文献   

6.
The absolute integral cross sections for the formation of HeH+ and HeD+ from the collisions of HD+(v,j=1)+He have been examined over a broad range of vibrational energy levels v=0-13 at the center-of-mass collision energies (ET) of 0.6 and 1.4 eV using the vacuum ultraviolet (VUV) pulsed field ionization photoelectron secondary ion coincidence method. The ET dependencies of the integral cross sections for products HeH+ and HeD+ from HD+(v=0-4)+He collisions in the ET range of 0-3 eV have also been measured using the VUV photoionization guided ion beam mass spectrometric technique, in which vibrationally selected HD+(v) reactant ions were prepared via excitation of selected autoionization resonances of HD. At low total energies, a pronounced isotope effect is observed in absolute integral cross sections for the HeH++D and HeD++H channels with significant favoring of the deuteron transfer channel. As v is increased in the range of v=0-9, the integral cross sections of the HeH++D channel are found to approach those of HeD++H. The observed velocity distributions of products HeD+ and HeH+ are consistent with an impulsive or spectator-stripping mechanism. Detailed quasiclassical trajectory (QCT) calculations are also presented for HD+(v,j=1)+He collisions at the same energies of the experiment. The QCT calculations were performed on the most accurate ab initio potential energy surface available. If the zero-point energy of the reaction products is taken into account, the QCT cross sections for products HeH+ and HeD+ from HD+(v)+He are found to be significantly lower than the experimental results at ET values near the reaction thresholds. The agreement between the experimental and QCT cross sections improves with translational energy. Except for prethreshold reactivity, QCT calculations ignoring the zero-point energy in the products are generally in good agreement with experimental absolute cross sections. The experimental HeH+/HeD+ branching ratios for the HD+(v=0-9)+He collisions are generally consistent with QCT predictions. The observed isotope effects can be rationalized on the basis of differences in thermochemical thresholds and angular momentum conservation constraints.  相似文献   

7.
Quantum state-to-state dynamics for the quenching process Br((2)P(1/2)) + H(2)(v(i) = 0, 1, j(i) = 0) → Br((2)P(3/2)) + H(2)(v(f), j(f)) has been studied based on two-state model on the recent coupled potential energy surfaces. It was found that the quenching probabilities have some oscillatory structures due to the interference of reflected flux in the Br((2)P(1/2)) + H(2) and Br((2)P(3/2)) + H(2) channels by repulsive potential in the near-resonant electronic-to-vibrational energy transfer process. The final vibrational state resolved integral cross sections were found to be dominated by the quenching process Br((2)P(1/2)) + H(2)(v) → Br((2)P(3/2)) + H(2)(v+1) and the nonadiabatic reaction probabilities for Br((2)P(1/2)) + H(2)(v = 0, 1, j(i) = 0) are quite small, which are consistent with previous theoretical and experimental results. Our calculated total quenching rate constant for Br((2)P(1/2)) + H(2)(v(i) = 0, j(i) = 0) at room temperature is in good agreement with the available experimental data.  相似文献   

8.
In this paper, we employ the time-dependent quantum wave packet method to study the reaction of F((2)P(3/2), (2)P(1/2)) with HD on the Alexander-Stark-Werner potential energy surface. The reaction probabilities and total integral cross sections of the spin-orbit ground and excited states for the two possible products of the system are calculated. Because the reaction channel of the excited spin-orbit state is closed at the resonance energy, the resonance feature does not appear in the reaction probabilities and cross section for the F((2)P(1/2))+HD(v=j=0)-->HF+D reaction, in contrast with that found for the ground spin--orbit state. We also compare the average cross sections of the two possible products with the experimental measurement. The resonance peak in the present average cross section for the HF+D product is slightly larger than the experimental result, but much smaller than that of the single-state calculations on the potential energy surface of Stark and Werner. It seems that the spin--orbit coupling would play a relatively important role in this reaction. Moreover, the isotope effects of the ground and excited spin--orbit states and the reactivity of the two product channels from the excited spin--orbit state are presented.  相似文献   

9.
10.
Ab initio potential energy surfaces and the corresponding analytical energy functions of the ground 1A' and excited 2A' states for the Li(2(2)P) plus H(2) reaction are constructed. Quasiclassical trajectory calculations on the fitted energy functions are performed to characterize the reactions of Li(2(2)P) with H(2)(v = 0, j = 1) and H(2)(v = 1, j = 1) as well as the reaction when the vibrational energy is replaced by collision energy. For simplicity, the transition probability is assumed to be unity when the trajectories go through the crossing seam region and change to the lower surface. The calculated rotational distributions of LiH(v = 0) for both H(2)(v = 0, j = 1) and H(2)(v = 1, j = 1) reactions are single-peaked with the maximum population at j' = 7, consistent with the previous observation. The vibrational excitation of H(2)(v = 1) may enhance the reaction cross section of LiH(v' = 0) by about 200 times, as compared to a result of 93-107 reported in the experimental measurements. In contrast, the enhancement is 3.1, if the same amount of energy is deposited in the translational states. This endothermic reaction can be considered as an analog of late barrier. According to the trajectory analysis, the vibrational excitation enlarges the H-H distance in the entrance channel to facilitate the reaction, but the excess energy may not open up additional reaction configuration.  相似文献   

11.
This paper presents the methodology to generate beams of ions in single quantum states for bimolecular ion-molecule reaction dynamics studies using pulsed field ionization (PFI) of atoms or molecules in high-n Rydberg states produced by vacuum ultraviolet (VUV) synchrotron or laser photoexcitation. Employing the pseudocontinuum high-resolution VUV synchrotron radiation at the Advanced Light Source as the photoionization source, PFI photoions (PFI-PIs) in selected rovibrational states have been generated for ion-molecule reaction studies using a fast-ion gate to pass the PFI-PIs at a fixed delay with respect to the detection of the PFI photoelectrons (PFI-PEs). The fast ion gate provided by a novel interleaved comb wire gate lens is the key for achieving the optimal signal-to-noise ratio in state-selected ion-molecule collision studies using the VUV synchrotron based PFI-PE secondary ion coincidence (PFI-PESICO) method. The most recent development of the VUV laser PFI-PI scheme for state-selected ion-molecule collision studies is also described. Absolute integral cross sections for state-selected H2+ ions ranging from v+ = 0 to 17 in collisions with Ar, Ne, and He at controlled translational energies have been obtained by employing the VUV synchrotron based PFI-PESICO scheme. The comparison between PFI-PESICO cross sections for the H2+(HD+)+Ne and H2+(HD+)+He proton-transfer reactions and theoretical cross sections based on quasiclassical trajectory (QCT) calculations and three-dimensional quantum scattering calculations performed on the most recently available ab initio potential energy surfaces is highlighted. In both reaction systems, quantum scattering resonances enhance the integral cross sections significantly above QCT predictions at low translational and vibrational energies. At higher energies, the agreement between experiment and quasiclassical theory is very good. The profile and magnitude of the kinetic energy dependence of the absolute integral cross sections for the H2+(v+ = 0-2,N+ = 1)+He proton-transfer reaction unambiguously show that the inclusion of Coriolis coupling is important in quantum dynamics scattering calculations of ion-molecule collisions.  相似文献   

12.
The integral cross section of the S((1)D(2)) + H(2)(j = 0) → SH + H reaction has been measured for the first time at collision energies from 0.820 down to 0.078 kJ mol(-1) in a high-resolution crossed beam experiment. The excitation function obtained exhibits a non-monotonic variation with collision energy and compares well with the results of high-level quantum calculations. In particular, the structures observed in the lower energy part, where only a few partial waves contribute, can be described in terms of the sequential opening of individual channels, consistent with the theoretical calculations.  相似文献   

13.
Time-dependent, quantum reaction dynamics wavepacket approach is employed to investigate the impacts of the translational, vibrational, and rotational motion on the HD+H(3)(+) → H(2)D(+) + H(2) reaction using the Xie-Braams-Bowman potential energy surface [Z. Xie, B. J. Braams, and J. M. Bowman, J. Chem. Phys. 122, 224307 (2005)]. We treat this five atom reaction with a seven-degree-of-freedom model by fixing one Jacobi and one torsion angle related to H(3) (+) at the lowest saddle point geometry of the potential energy surface. The initial state selected reaction probabilities show that the rotational excitations of H(+)-H(2) greatly enhance the reactivity with the reaction probabilities increased double at high rotational states compared to the ground state. However, the vibrational excitations of H(3) (+) hinder the reactivity. The ground state reaction probability shows no reaction threshold for this exoergic reaction, and as the translational energy increases, the reaction probability decreases. Furthermore, reactive resonances and zero point energy play very important roles on the reaction dynamics. The obtained integral cross section has the character of an exoergic reaction without a threshold: it decreases with the translational energy increasing. The calculated thermal rate constants using this seven-degree-of-freedom model are in agreement with a later experiment measurement.  相似文献   

14.
In this article we report the results of three-dimensional time-dependent quantum wavepacket calculations carried out for the Br + HD( v = 0, j = 0) reaction in the collision energy range 0.0-1.2 eV. An accurate potential energy surface computed by Kurosaki was used for the dynamical calculations. Both reactive channels, BrH + D and BrD + H, show vibrational enhancement of the reaction cross sections. For the three initial vibrational states considered, the production of BrD channel dominates over that of BrH for the considered collision energy range. The two arrangement channels exhibit different initial rotational state dependence. The cross section for the formation of BrD is almost independent of j whereas the same for the formation of BrH increases with increase in j. A comparison with the results on an e-LEPS surface shows that the two surfaces behave very differently with respect to the cross section for the initial rotational states.  相似文献   

15.
The effect of the potential energy surface on the K + HF → KF + H cross section has been studied using reasonable Sorbie-Murrell (bent saddle point) and LEPS (collinear saddle point) potential energy surfaces (PESs). Trajectory calculations for selected initial conditions (translational energies, rovibrational levels (v, J) of HF, as well as initial parallel or perpendicular alignments between the HF rotational angular momentum and the reactants relative velocity vectors) have been performed on these PESs to compare them with experiments. The Sorbie-Murrell and LEPS-4 PESs lead to steric effect ratio results quite close to the experimental ones, once the error margins are included. The resllts point towards a bent K-F-H saddle point although the PES is very isotropic. This could explain why experimental determinations lead to suggest a collinear saddle point. The K + HF → KF + H reaction exhibits an enormous vibrational enhancement of reactivity with one quantum HF vibrational excitation, even at translational energies well above the HF(v=0) threshold, where tunnelling effect contribution to reactivity can be neglected. This behaviour has not been reproduced in the trajectory calculations and no satisfactory explanation has been obtained for this fact. Nevertheless, the HF(v=1)/HF(v=0) cross section ratio at translational energies not far from the HF(v=0) threshold and the relative cross section for HF(v=0) have been satisfactorily descibed. In what regards rotation, the best theoretical results are those corresponding to the Sorbie-Murrell PES (the cross section increases with J), although important differences with experiment appear for the J = 0–3 interval at the lower translational energy values considered (0.54 and 0.77 eV).  相似文献   

16.
We have determined limits on the cross section for both electronically nonadiabatic excitation and quenching in the Cl((2)P(j)) + D(2) system. Our experiment incorporates crossed-molecular-beam scattering with state-selective Cl((2)P(12,32)) detection and velocity-mapped ion imaging. By colliding atomic chlorine with D(2), we address the propensity for collisions that result in a change of the spin-orbit level of atomic chlorine either through electronically nonadiabatic spin-orbit excitation Cl((2)P(32)) + D(2)-->Cl(*)((2)P(12)) + D(2) or through electronically nonadiabatic spin-orbit quenching Cl(*)((2)P(12)) + D(2)-->Cl((2)P(32)) + D(2). In the first part of this report, we estimate an upper limit for the electronically nonadiabatic spin-orbit excitation cross section at a collision energy of 5.3 kcal/mol, which lies above the energy of the reaction barrier (4.9 kcal/mol). Our analysis and simulation of the experimental data determine an upper limit for the excitation cross section as sigma(NA)< or =0.012 A(2). In the second part of this paper we investigate the propensity for electronically nonadiabatic spin-orbit quenching of Cl(*) following a collision with D(2) or He. We perform these experiments at collision energies above and below the energy of the reaction barrier. By comparing the amount of scattered Cl(*) in our images to the amount of Cl(*) lost from the atomic beam we obtain the maximum cross section for electronically nonadiabatic quenching as sigma(NA)< or =15(-15) (+44) A(2) for a collision energy of 7.6 kcal/mol. Our experiments show the probability for electronically nonadiabatic quenching in Cl(*) + D(2) to be indistinguishable to that for the kinematically identical system of Cl(*) + He.  相似文献   

17.
We present results of time-dependent quantum mechanics (TDQM) and quasiclassical trajectory (QCT) studies of the excitation function for O(3P) + H2(v = 0-3,j = 0) --> OH + H from threshold to 30 kcal/mol collision energy using benchmark potential energy surfaces [Rogers et al., J. Phys. Chem. A 104, 2308 (2000)]. For H2(v = 0) there is excellent agreement between quantum and classical results. The TDQM results show that the reactive threshold drops from 10 kcal/mol for v = 0 to 6 for v = 1, 5 for v = 2 and 4 for v = 3, suggesting a much slower increase in rate constant with vibrational excitation above v = 1 than below. For H2(v > 0), the classical results are larger than the quantum results by a factor approximately 2 near threshold, but the agreement monotonically improves until they are within approximately 10% near 30 kcal/mol collision energy. We believe these differences arise from stronger vibrational adiabaticity in the quantum dynamics, an effect examined before for this system at lower energies. We have also computed QCT OH(v',j') state-resolved cross sections and angular distributions. The QCT state-resolved OH(v') cross sections peak at the same vibrational quantum number as the H2 reagent. The OH rotational distributions are also quite hot and tend to cluster around high rotational quantum numbers. However, the dynamics seem to dictate a cutoff in the energy going into OH rotation indicating an angular momentum constraint. The state-resolved OH distributions were fit to probability functions based on conventional information theory extended to include an energy gap law for product vibrations.  相似文献   

18.
A guided-ion beam tandem mass spectrometer is used to study the reactions, W(+) + CH(4) (CD(4)) and [W,C,2H](+) + H(2) (D(2)), to probe the [W,C,4H](+) potential energy surface. The reaction W(+) + CH(4) produces [W,C,2H](+) in the only low-energy process. The analogous reaction in the CD(4) system exhibits a cross section with strong differences at the lowest energies caused by zero-point energy differences, demonstrating that this reaction is slightly exothermic for CH(4) and slightly endothermic for CD(4). The [W,C,2H](+) product ion reacts further at thermal energies with CH(4) to produce W(CH(2))(x)(+) (x = 2-4). At higher energies, the W(+) + CH(4) reaction forms WH(+) as the dominant ionic product with smaller amounts of WCH(3)(+), WCH(+), and WC(+) also formed. The energy dependent cross sections for endothermic formation of the various products are analyzed and allow the determination of D(0)(W(+)-CH(3)) approximately 2.31 +/- 0.10 eV, D(0)(W(+)-CH(2)) = 4.74 +/- 0.03 eV, D(0)(W(+)-CH) = 6.01 +/- 0.28 eV, and D(0)(W(+)-C) = 4.96 +/- 0.22 eV. We also examine the reverse reaction, [W,C,2H](+) + H(2) (D(2)) --> W(+) + CH(4) (CH(2)D(2)). Combining the cross sections for the forward and reverse processes yields an equilibrium constant from which D(0)(W(+)-CH(2)) = 4.72 +/- 0.04 eV is derived. Theoretical calculations performed at the B3LYP/HW+/6-311++G(3df,3p) level yield thermochemistry in reasonable agreement with experiment. These calculations help identify the structures and electronic states of the species involved and characterize the potential energy surface for the [W,C,4H](+) system.  相似文献   

19.
We present an exact quantum dynamical study and quasi-classical trajectory (QCT) calculations for the exchange and abstraction processes for the H + HS reaction. These calculations were based on a newly constructed high-quality potential energy surface for the lowest triplet state of H(2)S ((3)A"). The ab initio single-point energies were computed using complete active space self-consistent field and multi-reference configuration interaction method with a basis set of aug-cc-pV5Z. The time-dependent wave packet (TDWP) method was used to calculate the total reaction probabilities and integral cross sections over the collision energy (E(col)) range of 0.0-2.0 eV for the reactant HS initially at the ground state and the first vibrationally excited state. It was found that the initial vibrational excitation of HS enhances both abstraction and exchange processes. In addition, a good agreement is found between QCT and TDWP reaction probabilities at the total momentum J = 0 as a function of collision energy for the H + HS (v = 0, j = 0) reaction.  相似文献   

20.
In this theoretical work, we report quasiclassical dynamics predictions for the attack angle‐dependence exchange processes for the H + HS (v = 0, 1; j = 0) reaction by using the new triplet 3A″ and 3A′ potential energy surfaces, respectively. The calculated quasiclassical reaction probabilities of exchange reaction channel of reaction H(D)′ + H(D)S for J = 0, 10, 20, 30, 40 are in good agreement with quantum wave packet results over the collision energy range from 0.1 to 2.0 eV on 3A″ surfaces. The attack angle dependence reaction probability of the title reactions at J = 0 are calculated, respectively, on the two surfaces. The reaction probability was found to be strongly dependent on the attack angle. It may be ascribe to the significant difference of the effective potential barrier height in the two reactions. Besides, the reaction probabilities of exchange reaction channel of reaction H(D)′ + H(D)S for J = 0, 10, 20, 30, 40 are also predicted on 3A′ surfaces. © 2013 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.  相似文献   

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