Temperature-jump and trajectory studies of the quenching of CO2(010) by atomic oxygen
Abstract
A new variant of the temperature-jump method has been used to measure the rate of quenching of CO2(010) by O(3P). The value found for the rate constant at room temperature is 1.2 ± 0.2 × 10–12 cm3 molecule–1 s–1, in good agreement with a previous laboratory study. Our trajectory calculations show that such a large value of the room-temperature rate constant is not explicable in terms of an impulsive (Landau–Teller) mechanism but can be understood in terms of a curve-crossing (Nikitin) mechanism. However, the impulsive mechanism is still required to account for the strong temperature dependence of previous high-temperature, shock-tube results. Preliminary measurements of the rate of quenching of N2O(010) by O(3P) give a rate constant value similar to that found for CO2, which implies that formation of a bound triplet state of CO3 plays very little part in the quenching process for CO2(010).