We show that weakly bound He-containing van der Waals molecules can be
produced and magnetically trapped in buffer-gas cooling experiments, and
provide a general model for the formation and dynamics of these molecules. Our
analysis shows that, at typical experimental parameters, thermodynamics favors
the formation of van der Waals complexes composed of a helium atom bound to
most open-shell atoms and molecules, and that complex formation occurs quickly
enough to ensure chemical equilibrium. For molecular pairs composed of a He
atom and an S-state atom, the molecular spin is stable during formation,
dissociation, and collisions, and thus these molecules can be magnetically
trapped. Collisional spin relaxations are too slow to affect trap lifetimes.
However, helium-3-containing complexes can change spin due to adiabatic
crossings between trapped and untrapped Zeeman states, mediated by the
anisotropic hyperfine interaction, causing trap loss. We provide a detailed
model for Ag3He molecules, using ab initio calculation of Ag-He interaction
potentials and spin interactions, quantum scattering theory, and direct Monte
Carlo simulations to describe formation and spin relaxation in this system. The
calculated rate of spin-change agrees quantitatively with experimental
observations, providing indirect evidence for molecular formation in
buffer-gas-cooled magnetic traps.Comment: 20 pages, 13 figure