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Timescale

Structural investigations of metal-ion hydration have been carried out by spectroscopic, scadering and diffraction teclmiques, but these teclmiques do not always give identical results since they measure in different timescales. There are tliree distinct types of measurement ... [Pg.567]

The hydration of more inert ions has been studied by O labelling mass spectrometry. 0-emiched water is used, and an equilibrium between the solvent and the hydration around the central ion is first attained, after which the cation is extracted rapidly and analysed. The method essentially reveals the number of oxygen atoms that exchange slowly on the timescale of the extraction, and has been used to establish the existence of the stable [1 10304] cluster in aqueous solution. [Pg.568]

Hamiltonian, but in practice one often begins with a phenomenological set of equations. The set of macrovariables are chosen to include the order parameter and all otlier slow variables to which it couples. Such slow variables are typically obtained from the consideration of the conservation laws and broken synnnetries of the system. The remaining degrees of freedom are assumed to vary on a much faster timescale and enter the phenomenological description as random themial noise. The resulting coupled nonlinear stochastic differential equations for such a chosen relevant set of macrovariables are collectively referred to as the Langevin field theory description. [Pg.735]

Berne B J 1985 Molecular dynamics and Monte Carlo simulations of rare events Multiple Timescales ed J V Brackbill and B I Cohen (New York Academic Press)... [Pg.896]

The first two of these we can readily approach with the knowledge gained from the studies of trappmg and sticking of rare-gas atoms, but the long timescales involved in the third process may perhaps more usefiilly be addressed by kinetics and transition state theory [35]. [Pg.906]

The thennalization stage of this dissociation reaction is not amenable to modelling at the molecular dynamics level becanse of the long timescales required. For some systems, snch as O2 /Pt(l 11), a kinetic treatment is very snccessfiil [77]. However, in others, thennalization is not complete, and the internal energy of the molecnle can still enliance reaction, as observed for N2 /Fe(l 11) [78, 79] and in tlie dissociation of some small hydrocarbons on metal snrfaces [M]- A detailed explanation of these systems is presently not available. [Pg.913]

In the statistical description of ununolecular kinetics, known as Rice-Ramsperger-Kassel-Marcus (RRKM) theory [4,7,8], it is assumed that complete IVR occurs on a timescale much shorter than that for the unimolecular reaction [9]. Furdiemiore, to identify states of the system as those for the reactant, a dividing surface [10], called a transition state, is placed at the potential energy barrier region of the potential energy surface. The assumption implicit m RRKM theory is described in the next section. [Pg.1008]

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]

In the above discussion it was assumed that the barriers are low for transitions between the different confonnations of the fluxional molecule, as depicted in figure A3.12.5 and therefore the transitions occur on a timescale much shorter than the RRKM lifetime. This is the rapid IVR assumption of RRKM theory discussed in section A3.12.2. Accordingly, an initial microcanonical ensemble over all the confonnations decays exponentially. However, for some fluxional molecules, transitions between the different confonnations may be slower than the RRKM rate, giving rise to bottlenecks in the unimolecular dissociation [4, ]. The ensuing lifetime distribution, equation (A3.12.7), will be non-exponential, as is the case for intrinsic non-RRKM dynamics, for an mitial microcanonical ensemble of molecular states. [Pg.1024]

Furthemiore, IVR is not rapid between the C2H4 intramolecular modes and different excitation patterns of these modes result in different dissociation rates. As a result of these different timescales for dissociation, the relative populations of the vibrational modes of the C2H4 dimer change with time. [Pg.1037]

To be effective, it is necessary for the ions traversing the instniment to experience several RF cycles. Thus, unlike magnetic sector instmments, the ions fonned in the ion source of a quadnipole mass filter apparatus are accelerated to only a few eV kinetic energy (typically 5-10 eV). The timescale of the experiment is therefore... [Pg.1341]

The principal dilTerence from liquid-state NMR is that the interactions which are averaged by molecular motion on the NMR timescale in liquids lead, because of their anisotropic nature, to much wider lines in solids. Extra infonnation is, in principle, available but is often masked by the lower resolution. Thus, many of the teclmiques developed for liquid-state NMR are not currently feasible in the solid state. Furthemiore, the increased linewidth and the methods used to achieve high resolution put more demands on the spectrometer. Nevertheless, the field of solid-state NMR is advancing rapidly, with a steady stream of new experiments forthcoming. [Pg.1466]

STM has not as yet proved to be easily applicable to the area of ultrafast surface phenomena. Nevertheless, some success has been achieved in the direct observation of dynamic processes with a larger timescale. Kitamura et al [23], using a high-temperature STM to scan single lines repeatedly and to display the results as a time-ver.sn.s-position pseudoimage, were able to follow the difflision of atomic-scale vacancies on a heated Si(OOl) surface in real time. They were able to show that vacancy diffusion proceeds exclusively in one dimension, along the dimer row. [Pg.1681]

The timescale is just one sub-classification of chemical exchange. It can be further divided into coupled versus uncoupled systems, mutual or non-mutual exchange, inter- or intra-molecular processes and solids versus liquids. However, all of these can be treated in a consistent and clear fashion. [Pg.2092]

These experiments yield T2 which, in the case of fast exchange, gives the ratio (Aoi) /k. However, since the experiments themselves have an implicit timescale, absolute rates can be obtained in favourable circumstances. For the CPMG experiment, the timescale is the repetition time of the refocusing pulse for the Tjp experiment, it is the rate of precession around the effective RF field. If this timescale is fast witli respect to the exchange rate, then the experiment effectively measures T2 in the absence of exchange. If the timescale is slow, the apparent T2 contains the effects of exchange. Therefore, the apparent T2 shows a dispersion as the... [Pg.2106]

The approach is ideally suited to the study of IVR on fast timescales, which is the most important primary process in imimolecular reactions. The application of high-resolution rovibrational overtone spectroscopy to this problem has been extensively demonstrated. Effective Hamiltonian analyses alone are insufficient, as has been demonstrated by explicit quantum dynamical models based on ab initio theory [95]. The fast IVR characteristic of the CH cliromophore in various molecular environments is probably the most comprehensively studied example of the kind [96] (see chapter A3.13). The importance of this question to chemical kinetics can perhaps best be illustrated with the following examples. The atom recombination reaction... [Pg.2141]

Both MD and MC teclmiques evolve a finite-sized molecular configuration forward in time, in a step-by-step fashion. (In this context, MC simulation time has to be interpreted liberally, but there is a broad coimection between real time and simulation time (see [1, chapter 2]).) Connnon features of MD and MC simulation teclmiques are that there are limits on the typical timescales and length scales that can be investigated. The consequences of finite size must be considered both in specifying the molecular mteractions, and in analysing the results. [Pg.2241]

The vibrationally excited states of H2-OH have enough energy to decay either to H2 and OH or to cross the barrier to reaction. Time-dependent experiments have been carried out to monitor the non-reactive decay (to H2 + OH), which occurs on a timescale of microseconds for H2-OH but nanoseconds for D2-OH [52, 58]. Analogous experiments have also been carried out for complexes in which the H2 vibration is excited [59]. The reactive decay products have not yet been detected, but it is probably only a matter of time. Even if it proves impossible for H2-OH, there are plenty of other pre-reactive complexes that can be produced. There is little doubt that the spectroscopy of such species will be a rich source of infonnation on reactive potential energy surfaces in the fairly near future. [Pg.2451]


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See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.381 , Pg.386 ]

See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.18 , Pg.224 ]

See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.17 , Pg.31 , Pg.34 , Pg.45 , Pg.145 , Pg.217 , Pg.222 , Pg.223 , Pg.226 , Pg.227 , Pg.230 , Pg.231 , Pg.242 , Pg.243 , Pg.244 , Pg.251 , Pg.257 , Pg.272 , Pg.274 ]




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Aging, timescale

Approximate Nonlinear Lumping in Systems with Timescale Separation

Attosecond timescale

Characteristic timescale

Chemical timescale

Chromatographic timescale

Complexation typical timescales

Control systems timescale

Convective timescale

Development timescale

Diffusion typical timescale

Drug development timescale

Dynamical timescale

Electron ionization timescale

Exchange timescale

Excited state nanosecond timescale

Expansion timescale

Experimental timescale

Fluxional timescale

Geological timescale

Hopping timescale

Intermediate timescale

Kelvin-Helmholtz timescale

Length and Timescales

Linear Lumping in Systems with Timescale Separation

Macroscopic timescale

Microscopic and macroscopic timescales

Microscopic timescale

Mixing timescales

Mixing, atmospheric timescales

Molecular dynamics timescales

NMR timescale

Nuclear timescale

Photochemical reactions, timescale

Photoelectronic process, timescale

Qubits, Qugates, Timescales and Essential Requirements

Radiocarbon dating timescale

Reaction timescale

Reactor characteristic timescales

Relaxation timescale

Relaxation timescales

Respiratory timescale

Scale timescale

Segmental motion timescale

Short timescale regime

Short timescale regime dynamics

Short timescale regime motion

Small Molecules short timescales

Species Lifetimes and Timescales

Spectral timescale

Spectral timescales

Spectroscopic timescale

Spectroscopic timescales

Systematic Timescale Bridging Algorithm

The geological timescale

Thermal events, timescale

Thermal timescale

Timescale Analysis

Timescale dimensions

Timescale in chemistry

Timescale of molecular motion

Timescale of the NMR experiment

Timescale of the diffusion

Timescale separation

Timescales

Timescales and basic equations of stellar structure

Timescales concept

Timescales dissipation

Timescales dynamics

Timescales glass, transition

Timescales in Reactive Flow Models

Timescales in relaxation phenomena

Timescales kinetic methods

Timescales limitations

Timescales motion

Timescales of Different Phenomena

Timescales particle mechanics

Timescales rapid flow techniques

Timescales reduction based

Timescales technical developments

Timescales water, activity

Timescales, experimental

Transport processes typical timescales

Voltammetry timescale

Voltammetry, accessible timescales

Water timescale

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