12 research outputs found
Observation of correlated excitations in bimolecular collisions
Whereas collisions between atoms and molecules are largely understood,
collisions between two molecules have proven much harder to study. In both
experiment and theory, our ability to determine quantum state-resolved
bimolecular cross sections lags behind their atom-molecule counterparts by
decades. For many bimolecular systems, even rules of thumb -- much less
intuitive understanding -- of scattering cross sections are lacking. Here, we
report the measurement of state-to-state differential cross sections on the
collision of state-selected and velocity-controlled nitric oxide (NO) radicals
and oxygen (O2) molecules. Using velocity map imaging of the scattered NO
radicals, the full product-pair correlations of rotational excitation that
occurs in both collision partners from individual encounters are revealed. The
correlated cross sections show surprisingly good agreement with quantum
scattering calculations using ab initio NO-O2 potential energy surfaces. The
observations show that the well-known energy-gap law that governs atom-molecule
collisions does not generally apply to bimolecular excitation processes, and
reveal a propensity rule for the vector correlation of product angular momenta.Comment: Received: 06 September 2017 Accepted: 20 December 2017 Published
online: 19 February 2018, Nature Chemistry 201
Energy dependent parity-pair behavior in NO + He collisions
Colliding molecules behave fundamentally differently at high and low collision energies. At high energies, a collision can be described to a large extent using classical mechanics, and the scattering process can be compared to a billiard-ball-like collision. At low collision energies, the wave character of the collision partners dominates, and only quantum mechanics can predict the outcome of an encounter. It is, however, not so clear how these limits evolve into each other as a function of the collision energy. Here, we investigate and visualize this evolution using a special feature of the differential cross sections for inelastic collisions between NO radicals and He atoms. The so-called āparity-pairā transitions have similar differential cross sections at high collision energies, whereas their cross sections are significantly different in the quantum regime at low energies. These transitions can be used as a probe for the quantum nature of the collision process. The similarity of the parity- pair differential cross sections at high energies could be theoretically explained if the first-order Born approximation were applicable. We found, however, that the anisotropy of the NOāHe interaction potential is too strong for the first-order Born approximation to be valid, so higher-order perturbations must be taken into account
State-resolved diffraction oscillations imaged for inelastic collisions of no radicals with he, ne and ar
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