Chemistry with hydrogen gas in a cryogenic buffer gas cell
ORAL
Abstract
Chemical reactions in the cold, diffuse regime present practical interest - such as in astrophysical environments or as sources for cold molecular beams. These reactions are also theoretically interesting due to the quasi-classical nature of the collisions. Cryogenic buffer gas cells are an excellent platform to study chemistry in this regime. Here, we present the reaction of Ca with three hydrogen isotopologues - H2, D2, and HD - to produce CaH or CaD molecules in a buffer gas cell at 6 K. We show that H2 produces a far brighter beam than the other isotopologues, and serves as both a reactant and a buffer gas. To model the reactions we use quasi-classical trajectory simulations to estimate the reaction rates, which qualitatively explains the observed results.
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Publication: Qi Sun, Jinyu Dai, Rian Koots, Benjamin Riley, Jesús Pérez-Ríos, Debayan Mitra, & Tanya Zelevinsky. (2025). Chemistry in a cryogenic buffer gas cell. arXiv. https://arxiv.org/abs/2501.05613
Presenters
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Benjamin Cohen Riley
Columbia University
Authors
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Benjamin Cohen Riley
Columbia University
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Qi Sun
Columbia University
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Jinyu Dai
Columbia University
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Rian Koots
Stony Brook University (SUNY)
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Jesús Pérez-Ríos
Stony Brook University (SUNY)
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Debayan Mitra
Columbia University, Indiana University Bloomington, Indiana University, Bloomington
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Tanya Zelevinsky
Columbia University