Observation of the isotope effect in sub-kelvin reactions

Quantum phenomena in the translational motion of reactants, which are usually negligible at room temperature, can dominate reaction dynamics at low temperatures. In such cold conditions, even the weak centrifugal force is enough to create a potential barrier that keeps reactants separated. However,...

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Veröffentlicht in:Nature chemistry 2014-04, Vol.6 (4), p.332-335
Hauptverfasser: Lavert-Ofir, Etay, Shagam, Yuval, Henson, Alon B., Gersten, Sasha, Kłos, Jacek, Żuchowski, Piotr S., Narevicius, Julia, Narevicius, Edvardas
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Quantum phenomena in the translational motion of reactants, which are usually negligible at room temperature, can dominate reaction dynamics at low temperatures. In such cold conditions, even the weak centrifugal force is enough to create a potential barrier that keeps reactants separated. However, reactions may still proceed through tunnelling because, at low temperatures, wave-like properties become important. At certain de Broglie wavelengths, the colliding particles can become trapped in long-lived metastable scattering states, leading to sharp increases in the total reaction rate. Here, we show that these metastable states are responsible for a dramatic, order-of-magnitude-strong, quantum kinetic isotope effect by measuring the absolute Penning ionization reaction rates between hydrogen isotopologues and metastable helium down to 0.01 K. We demonstrate that measurements of a single isotope are insufficient to constrain ab initio calculations, making the kinetic isotope effect in the cold regime necessary to remove ambiguity among possible potential energy surfaces. In cold chemistry, quantum phenomena in reactants' translational motion lead to the temporary trapping of reactants in a collisional complex. It is now shown that this metastable complex is responsible for a dramatic quantum kinetic isotope effect as observed in Penning ionization reactions at low temperatures.
ISSN:1755-4330
1755-4349
DOI:10.1038/nchem.1857