Model of reactive collisions in a cryogenic buffer gas cell
ORAL
Abstract
Chemical reactions in buffer gas cells have been previously performed via exothermic reactions or endothermic reactions whose barriers were overcome via the excitation of the reacting metal. Recently, the highly endothermic reaction between Ca atoms and an H2 buffer gas has been notably achieved to produce a large flux of CaH in a buffer gas cell without the need to electronically excite Ca [1]. We develop a reaction network to describe the dynamics in a buffer gas cell, using reaction rates from quasi-classical trajectory simulations, properly predicting the yield of CaH. We find that the inclusion of internal states is critical to describing the facilitation of endothermic reactions in cryogenic buffer gas beam environments.
[1] Sun, Q., Dai, J., Koots, R., Riley, B., Pérez-Ríos, J., Mitra, D., & Zelevinsky, T. (2025). Chemistry in a cryogenic buffer gas cell. arXiv preprint arXiv:2501.05613.
[1] Sun, Q., Dai, J., Koots, R., Riley, B., Pérez-Ríos, J., Mitra, D., & Zelevinsky, T. (2025). Chemistry in a cryogenic buffer gas cell. arXiv preprint arXiv:2501.05613.
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Publication: Sun, Q., Dai, J., Koots, R., Riley, B., Pérez-Ríos, J., Mitra, D., & Zelevinsky, T. (2025). Chemistry in a cryogenic buffer gas cell. arXiv preprint arXiv:2501.05613.
Presenters
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Rian Koots
Stony Brook University (SUNY)
Authors
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Rian Koots
Stony Brook University (SUNY)
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Qi Sun
Columbia University
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Jinyu Dai
Columbia University
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Benjamin Cohen Riley
Columbia University
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Debayan Mitra
Columbia University, Indiana University Bloomington, Indiana University, Bloomington
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Tanya Zelevinsky
Columbia University
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Jesús Pérez-Ríos
Stony Brook University (SUNY)