The relation between the high-temperature and room-temperature structure of CsCuCl3 -C.J. Kroese and W.J.A. Maaskant.
Quenching of vibrationally excited N2 by atomic oxygen
โ Scribed by R.J. McNeal; M.E. Whitson Jr.; G.R. Cook
- Publisher
- Elsevier Science
- Year
- 1972
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 380 KB
- Volume
- 16
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0009-2614
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
โฆ Synopsis
A recently developed photoioniz2tion
technique for detection of vibratiorally-cxcited nitr~gcn (N$ has been applied to study the quenching of N2 by 0 at 300ยฐK. The rate coefficient for qnenching of Na by 0 is found to be (3.5~1.4)x10-~5
cm3 set-1. The efficient vibrational relaxation previously observed in the N;-0 system in shock tubes at high temperatures and attributed to a chemical interaction persists at low temperatures.
๐ SIMILAR VOLUMES
The W exchange rate for thr Nz-1110 system is determined usmg a hard-core repuist\c patcntial. It is found that the' rapid drzxriration rate zmses from near-resonant VR exchanges in\ol;ing non-dipole ch;~nges in the rot.ttionaI <tdteS I'urIhermore, a chssicai-path approximation is used and the resul
Quenchmg of CS A 'n(v = 0) by 0 3P IS enhanced by perturbations due to a' 3 Z+(u = 10) and d 3A (u = 4) The rotatlonal-state dependence IS lmcar UI the s&et-trIplet m~vmg coefficients and mdlcates an orrentatlondependent mteractlon Symmetry correlations suggest that the perturbations promote formati