Vibrational deactivation of carbon monoxide by hydrogen and nitrogen from 100 to 650 °K
- 15 December 1974
- journal article
- research article
- Published by AIP Publishing in The Journal of Chemical Physics
- Vol. 61 (12) , 5421-5425
- https://doi.org/10.1063/1.1681897
Abstract
Collisional quenching of carbon monoxide by hydrogen and nitrogen has been studied in the 100–650°K temperature range using the laser excited vibrational fluorescence method. The rate constant for CO–H2 deactivation increases smoothly with temperature from 2.6±0.3 sec−1·Torr−1 at 112°K to 170±15 sec−1·Torr−1 at 623°K. The vibration‐to‐vibration energy transfer results for CO–N2 mixtures (exothermic direction) show only a slight temperature dependence from 103 to 651°K with a broad maximum of 420±30 sec−1·Torr−1 in the temperature range 300–400°K. Comparison of our rates with high temperature shock tubes results show excellent agreement for the CO–H2 V → R,T process and only fair agreement for the CO–N2 V → V exchange process. This latter discrepancy may be partially due to the uncertainties involved in extracting V → V energy transfer rates from shock tube data.Keywords
This publication has 22 references indexed in Scilit:
- Vibration-vibration energy exchange between carbon monoxide and oxygenChemical Physics Letters, 1974
- Vibrational relaxation of H2 in the range 500–40°KChemical Physics Letters, 1974
- Vibration-to-vibration energy transfer in near-resonant collisionsThe Journal of Chemical Physics, 1974
- Temperature dependence of near resonant vibration → vibration energy transfer in HCl–D2 mixturesThe Journal of Chemical Physics, 1973
- Shock Tube Vibrational Relaxation Measurements: N2 Relaxation by H2O and the CO–N2 V–V RateThe Journal of Chemical Physics, 1972
- Theoretical Model for the Differential Quenching Rates of CO Fluorescence by Ortho- and ParahydrogenThe Journal of Chemical Physics, 1971
- Vibrational Relaxation of Carbon Monoxide by Hydrogen and Helium down to 100°KThe Journal of Chemical Physics, 1970
- Vibration–Vibration Energy Transfer between Diatomic MoleculesThe Journal of Chemical Physics, 1969
- Shock-Wave Study of Vibrational Energy Exchange between Diatomic MoleculesThe Journal of Chemical Physics, 1969
- Vibrational Relaxation of Carbon Monoxide by Ortho- and ParahydrogenThe Journal of Chemical Physics, 1964