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Bottlenecks unimolecular reaction rate theory

The Davis-Gray theory teaches us that by retaining the most important elements of the nonhnear reaction dynamics it is possible to accurately locate the intramolecular bottlenecks and to have an exact phase space separatrix as the transition state. Unfortunately, even for systems with only two DOFs, there may be considerable technical difficulties associated with locating the exact bottlenecks and the separatrix. Exact calculations of the fluxes across these phase space structures present more problems. For these reasons, further development of unimolecular reaction rate theory requires useful approximations. [Pg.39]

The most important element of the Davis-Gray theory of unimolecular reaction rate is the identification of bottlenecks to intramolecular energy flow and the intermolecular separatrix to molecular fragmentation. Davis and Gray s work was motivated by the discovery of bottlenecks in chaotic transport by MacKay, Meiss, and Percival [8,9] and by Bensimon and Kadanoff [10]. [Pg.30]

A situation that arises from the intramolecular dynamics of A and completely distinct from apparent non-RRKM behaviour is intrinsic non-RRKM behaviour [9], By this, it is meant that A has a non-random P(t) even if the internal vibrational states of A are prepared randomly. This situation arises when transitions between individual molecular vibrational/rotational states are slower than transitions leading to products. As a result, the vibrational states do not have equal dissociation probabilities. In tenns of classical phase space dynamics, slow transitions between the states occur when the reactant phase space is metrically decomposable [13,14] on the timescale of the imimolecular reaction and there is at least one bottleneck [9] in the molecular phase space other than the one defining the transition state. An intrinsic non-RRKM molecule decays non-exponentially with a time-dependent unimolecular rate constant or exponentially with a rate constant different from that of RRKM theory. [Pg.1011]


See other pages where Bottlenecks unimolecular reaction rate theory is mentioned: [Pg.5]    [Pg.8]    [Pg.305]    [Pg.42]    [Pg.208]    [Pg.1011]    [Pg.276]    [Pg.36]   


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