Moment of Inertia Influence on Ion-Molecule Reaction Rates

1989 ◽  
Vol 44 (1) ◽  
pp. 1-3
Author(s):  
R. Schuster ◽  
W. Stiller

Abstract The locked-dipole model for reactions between ions and polar molecules is modified by introducing the moment of inertia into the centrifugal term of the interaction potential. The resulting rate coefficients are compared with other models and experimental data.

2013 ◽  
Vol 465-466 ◽  
pp. 368-372
Author(s):  
M. Haniff Junos ◽  
Nurulasikin Mohd Suhadis ◽  
Mahmud M. Zihad

This paper presents the experimental determination of the moment of inertia of USM e-UAV by using pendulum method. Compound pendulum experiment is used to determine the moment of inertia about x and y axes while the moment of inertia about z-axis is determined using bifilar torsion pendulum method. An experimental setup is developed with appropriate dimension to accommodate USM e-UAV. Experimental data are presented and discussed.


It is permissible to assume that the rate coefficient for collisions between ions and polar molecules does not depend on the moment of inertia of the latter because the rotation time is brief compared with the collision time. On taking the moment of inertia to be vanishingly small the classical collision problem can be solved exactly when the angular momentum vector is normal to the orbital plane. Use is made of the adiabatic invariance of ∮ p d q /2π in which p is an appropriate momentum and q is the conjugate coordinate. This adiabatic invariant fixes the change in the rotational energy in moving from an infinite separation to any chosen position. The average dipole orientation is thereby determined, which fixes the force acting. The potential energy function (including due allowance for the rotational energy stored) is now written down and an integral expression for the primitive rate coefficient is thence obtained. The ratio of the primitive rate coefficient to the Langevin rate coefficient depends only on the initial rotational energy and on the dimensionless parameter β = 2 αkT/D 2 , where α is the polarizability, D is the dipole moment and T is the temperature. Extensive computations have been performed. Tables are presented giving the primitive rate coefficient and also approximations to the thermally averaged rate coefficients for linear and for spherical top molecules.


Open Physics ◽  
2008 ◽  
Vol 6 (3) ◽  
Author(s):  
Maria Kaczmarczyk ◽  
Andrzej Korejwo

AbstractIn the paper calculation of the moments of inertia for nuclei from the region 87 ≤ Z ≤ 100 and 130 ≤ N ≤ 156 was made in dependence on the angular momentum of their rotational states. The experimental values of the moments of inertia were calculated for rotational energy of the classic rotor in its quantum form, with the use of a simple formula. The moment of inertia term appearing in the formula was treated as a variable. The calculations were carried out on the basis of experimental data for the energies of the rotational levels for 51 bands built on ground states for even-even nuclei and for nuclei with odd mass number A. In addition, 30 rotational bands built on excited states were also analysed in the investigated region in case of even-even nuclei. For many bands and nuclei the considered dependence of the moment of inertia on angular momentum has been found in the analytical form by fitting polynomials to the experimental data. It turned out that obtained results for the moments of inertia made it possible to describe the energies of rotational levels with a relative deviation not greater or only slightly greater than 1%. In general, in the case of 12 bands of ground level the maximum relative deviation of obtained level energies is smaller than 1%.


1982 ◽  
Author(s):  
Carol Zahner ◽  
M. Stephen Kaminaka

Designs ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 5 (1) ◽  
pp. 8
Author(s):  
Pyrrhon Amathes ◽  
Paul Christodoulides

Photography can be used for pleasure and art but can also be used in many disciplines of science, because it captures the details of the moment and can serve as a proving tool due to the information it preserves. During the period of the Apollo program (1969 to 1972), the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) successfully landed humans on the Moon and showed hundreds of photos to the world presenting the travel and landings. This paper uses computer simulations and geometry to examine the authenticity of one such photo, namely Apollo 17 photo GPN-2000-00113. In addition, a novel approach is employed by creating an experimental scene to illustrate details and provide measurements. The crucial factors on which the geometrical analysis relies are locked in the photograph and are: (a) the apparent position of the Earth relative to the illustrated flag and (b) the point to which the shadow of the astronaut taking the photo reaches, in relation to the flagpole. The analysis and experimental data show geometrical and time mismatches, proving that the photo is a composite.


Sensors ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 21 (4) ◽  
pp. 1298
Author(s):  
Selenia Ghio ◽  
Marco Martorella ◽  
Daniele Staglianò ◽  
Dario Petri ◽  
Stefano Lischi ◽  
...  

The fast and uncontrolled rise of the space objects population is threatening the safety of space assets. At the moment, space awareness solutions are among the most calling research topic. In fact, it is vital to persistently observe and characterize resident space objects. Instrumental highlights for their characterization are doubtlessly their size and rotational period. The Inverse Radon Transform (IRT) has been demonstrated to be an effective method for this task. The analysis presented in this paper has the aim to compare various approaches relying on IRT for the estimation of the object’s rotation period. Specifically, the comparison is made on the basis of simulated and experimental data.


Author(s):  
Chuanwen Zhang ◽  
Guangxu Zhou ◽  
Ting Yang ◽  
Ningran Song ◽  
Xinli Wang ◽  
...  

Energies ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 13 (22) ◽  
pp. 5868
Author(s):  
Jason Graetz ◽  
John J. Vajo

An investigation of electrolyte-assisted hydrogen storage reactions in complex aluminum hydrides (LiAlH4 and NaAlH4) reveals significantly reduced reaction times for hydrogen desorption and uptake in the presence of an electrolyte. LiAlH4 evolves ~7.8 wt% H2 over ~3 h in the presence of a Li-KBH4 eutectic at 130 °C compared to ~25 h for the same material without the electrolyte. Similarly, NaAlH4 exhibits 4.8 wt% H2 evolution over ~4 h in the presence of a diglyme electrolyte at 150 °C compared to 4.4 wt% in ~15 h for the same material without the electrolyte. These reduced reaction times are composed of two effects, an increase in reaction rates and a change in the reaction kinetics. While typical solid state dehydrogenation reactions exhibit kinetics with rates that continuously decrease with the extent of reaction, we find that the addition of an electrolyte results in rates that are relatively constant over the full desorption window. Fitting the kinetics to an Avrami-Erofe’ev model supports these observations. The desorption rate coefficients increase in the presence of an electrolyte, suggesting an increase in the velocities of the reactant-product interfaces. In addition, including an electrolyte increases the growth parameters, primarily for the second desorption steps, resulting in the observed relatively constant reaction rates. Similar effects occur upon hydrogen uptake in NaH/Al where the presence of an electrolyte enables hydrogenation under more practical low temperature (75 °C) and pressure (50 bar H2) conditions.


1971 ◽  
Vol 34 (4) ◽  
pp. 255-256 ◽  
Author(s):  
S.A. Hjorth ◽  
J. Oppelstrup ◽  
G. Ehrling

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