112 research outputs found

    Magnetic tuning of ultracold barrierless chemical reactions

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    While attaining external field control of bimolecular chemical reactions has long been a coveted goal of physics and chemistry, the role of hyperfine interactions and dc magnetic fields in achieving such control has remained elusive. We develop an extended coupled-channel statistical theory of barrierless atom-diatom chemical reactions, and apply it to elucidate the effects of magnetic fields and hyperfine interactions on the ultracold chemical reaction Li(2S1/2^2\text{S}_{1/2}) + CaH(2Σ+^2\Sigma^+) →\to LiH(1Σ+^1\Sigma^+) + Ca(1S0^1\text{S}_{0}) on a newly developed set of ab initio potential energy surfaces. We observe large field effects on the reaction cross sections, opening up the possibility of controlling ultracold barrierless chemical reactions by tuning selected hyperfine states of the reactants with an external magnetic field.Comment: 4.2 pages plus Supplemental Materia

    Cold collisions of heavy 2Σ^2\Sigma molecules with alkali-metal atoms in a magnetic field: Ab initio analysis and prospects for sympathetic cooling of SrOH(2Σ)(^2\Sigma) by Li(2^2S)

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    We use accurate ab initio and quantum scattering calculations to explore the prospects for sympathetic cooling of the heavy molecular radical SrOH(2Σ^2\Sigma) by ultracold Li atoms in a magnetic trap. A two-dimensional potential energy surface (PES) for the triplet electronic state of Li-SrOH is calculated ab initio using the partially spin-restricted coupled cluster method with single, double and perturbative triple excitations and a large correlation-consistent basis set. The highly anisotropic PES has a deep global minimum in the skewed Li-HOSr geometry with De=4932D_e=4932 cm−1^{-1} and saddle points in collinear configurations. Our quantum scattering calculations predict low spin relaxation rates in fully spin-polarized Li+SrOH collisions with the ratios of elastic to inelastic collision rates well in excess of 100 over a wide range of magnetic fields (1-1000 G) and collision energies (10−5−0.1^{-5}-0.1~K) suggesting favorable prospects for sympathetic cooling of SrOH molecules with spin-polarized Li atoms in a magnetic trap. We find that spin relaxation in Li+SrOH collisions occurs via a direct mechanism mediated by the magnetic dipole-dipole interaction between the electron spins of Li and SrOH, and that the indirect (spin-rotation) mechanism is strongly suppressed. The upper limit to the Li+SrOH reaction rate coefficient calculated for the singlet PES using adiabatic capture theory is found to decrease from 4×10−104\times 10^{-10}~cm3^3/s to a limiting value of 3.5×10−103.5\times 10^{-10} cm3^3/s with decreasing temperature from 0.1 K to 1 μ\muK

    Quantum mechanical calculations of state-to-state cross sections and rate constants for the F + DCl → Cl + DF reaction

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    9 págs.; 10 figs.; 3 tabs.© 2015 AIP Publishing LLC. We present accurate state-to-state quantum wave packet calculations of integral cross sections and rate constants for the title reaction. Calculations are carried out on the best available ground 12A′ global adiabatic potential energy surface of Deskevich et al. [J. Chem. Phys. 124, 224303 (2006)]. Converged state-to-state reaction cross sections have been calculated for collision energies up to 0.5 eV and different initial rotational and vibrational excitations, DCl(v = 0, j = 0 − 1; v = 1, j = 0). Also, initial-state resolved rate constants of the title reaction have been calculated in a temperature range of 100-400 K. It is found that the initial rotational excitation of the DCl molecule does not enhance reactivity, in contract to the reaction with the isotopologue HCl in which initial rotational excitation produces an important enhancement. These differences between the isotopologue reactions are analyzed in detail and attributed to the presence of resonances for HCl(v = 0, j), absent in the case of DCl(v = 0, j). For vibrational excited DCl(v = 1, j), however, the reaction cross section increases noticeably, what is also explained by another resonance.Financial support from the Scientific and Technological Research Council of TURKEY (TUBITAK) (Project No. TBAG- 112T827) is gratefully acknowledged. Computations have been done on the High Performance and Grid Computing Center (TR-Grid) machine at ULAKBIM/TURKEY. O.R. has been supported by the Ministerio de Economía e Innovación under Grant Nos. CSD2009-00038 and FIS2011-29596-C02 and used the CESGA computing centre under computing ICTS grants and also acknowledge the Chemistry and Molecular Sciences and Technologies COST Action CM1401. J.K. is grateful for the financial support from the U.S. National Science Foundation (Grant No. CHE-1213332 to M. H. Alexander). O.R. and N.B. also acknowledge CSIC for a travelling Grant No. I-LINK0775.Peer Reviewe

    Cold, anisotropically-interacting van der Waals molecule: TiHe

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    We have used laser ablation and helium buffer-gas cooling to produce the titanium-helium van der Waals molecule at cryogenic temperatures. The molecules were detected through laser-induced fluorescence spectroscopy. Ground-state Ti-He binding energies were determined for the ground and first rotationally excited states from studying equilibrium thermodynamic properties, and found to agree well with theoretical calculations based on newly calculated ab initio Ti-He interaction potentials, opening up novel possibilities for studying the formation, dynamics, and non-universal chemistry of van der Waals clusters at low temperatures

    Full-dimensional quantum scattering calculations on ultracold atom-molecule collisions in magnetic fields: The role of molecular vibrations

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    Rigorous quantum scattering calculations on ultracold molecular collisions in external fields present an outstanding computational problem due to strongly anisotropic atom-molecule interactions that depend on the relative orientation of the collision partners, as well as on their vibrational degrees of freedom. Here, we present the first numerically exact three-dimensional quantum scattering calculations on strongly anisotropic atom-molecule (Li+CaH) collisions in an external magnetic field based on the parity-adapted total angular momentum representation and a new three-dimensional potential energy surface (PES) for the triplet Li-CaH collision complex using the unrestricted coupled cluster method with single, double and perturbative triple excitations [UCCSD(T)] and a large quadruple-zeta type basis set. We find that while the full three-dimensional treatment is necessary for the accurate description of Li (MS=1/2M_S=1/2)+CaH (v=0,N=0,MS=1/2v=0,N=0,M_S=1/2) collisions as a function of magnetic field, the magnetic resonance density and statistical properties of spin-polarized atom-molecule collisions are not strongly affected by vibrational degrees of freedom, justifying the rigid-rotor approximation used in previous calculations. We observe rapid, field-insensitive vibrational quenching in ultracold Li (MS=1/2M_S=1/2)+CaH (v=1,N=0,MS=1/2v=1,N=0, M_S=1/2) collisions, leading to efficient collisional cooling of CaH vibrations.Comment: 12 pages, 10 figures, 64 reference
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