Title: Atomic and molecular collisions' Present and future'
1Atomic and molecular collisions. Present and
future!.
- R. Cabrera-Trujillo,
- Quantum Theory Project
- University of Florida
2Interstellar intercloud gas
- Chemistry
- Reaction rates
- Spectroscopy
- Energy transfer
- Charge transfer
3- Ionized nebulae
- Electron scattering
4Planetary aurorae
- Chemical composition
- Photon emission
- Ionization
- Energy and momentum
- transfer
- Reactivity
5- Planetary surface processes
- Sputtering
- Aircraft surface effects
- Material degradation
6Radiotherapy and dosimetry
- Chemical modification
- Energy deposition
- Tumor treatment
7Microelectronic and metallurgic
- Material modification
- Stress, tension
- Si and Cu implantation
- Microcircuity
8The problem Energy loss
9Schematic view of the collision.
10Potential Energy Surface dynamics
11Electron-Nuclear Dynamics approach (END)
- Time-dependent treatment of all electrons and
nuclei. - Instantaneous forces from the Coulombic
Hamiltonian. No PESs are needed. - Choice of molecular wave function in a given
basis is the only approximation. - Cartesian laboratory coordinates are used.
12- Principle of least action produces the quantum
mechanical equations of motion through the TDVP - The wave function parameters (complex molecular
orbital coefficients, z, average nuclear
positions, R, and momenta, P, e.t.c.) are the
dynamical variables.
13Dynamical Equations
Quantum Mechanical Action
Quantum Mechanical Lagrangian
14Dynamical Equations
Principle of least action or Time-Dependent
Variational Principle
Euler-Lagrange Equations
15Molecular Coherent State
16Dynamical Equations
For nuclei description
For electronic structure (complex MO coefficients)
The Lagrangian evaluated at zero width of
the nuclear wave packets.
17Dynamical Equations (cont.)
18Analysis of Evolved State
For a time t, when products are well separated
Impact parameter b, collision energy E, and final
state f in the same basis.
19Classical Cross Section
Where the sum is over trajectories yielding the
same scattering angle
Diverges for
(forward scattering or glory angle)
(Rainbow angle)
and
20Semi-classical Corrections
- Uniform Airy Approximation (K. W. Ford and J. A.
Wheeler, Ann. Phys. 7, 259 (1959)) - Schiff Approximation
- (L. I. Schiff, Phys. Rev. 103, 443 (1956))
- includes all the terms of the Born series
- rainbow and glory angle treated in a single
approach without requiring the separation of
different scattering regions.
21angle between and
22H H2O at 50 eV b1.7 a.u.
23H H2O at 50 eV b3.0 a.u.
24H C2H6 at 5 eV b4.0 a.u.
25H C2H6 at 5 eV b2.0 a.u.
26Deflection function for H?He and H?He at 0.5 keV
27Direct differential cross section for H?He at
0.5, 1.5, and 5.0 keV. The experimental points
are fromL. K. Johnson et al., Phys. Rev. A40,
3625 (1989).
28Direct differential cross section for He ? He for
projectile energies of 0.5, 1.5, and 5.0
keV. The experiment is fromD. E. Nitz et al.,
Phys. Rev. A35, 4541 (1987).
29Direct differential cross section for He ? Ne for
0.5, 1.5, and 5.0 keV. The experiment is
fromR. S. Gao et al., Phys. Rev. A36, 3077
(1987).
30Direct differential cross section for H ? N? for
0.5, 1.5, and 5.0 projectile energies. Experiment
al pointsSolid squareL. S. Johnson et al.,
Phys. Rev. A38, 2794 (1988) open circles J. H.
Newman et al., J. Geophys. Res. 90, 8947 (1986).
31Direct and charge transfer differential cross
section for He at 1.5 keV colliding with Ne.
Experimental points are from Johnson et. al.
PRA, 40, 4920 (1989).
32Charge transfer differential cross section for H
at 0.5, 1.5, and 5.0 keV colliding with atomic
and molecular oxygen.
Experimental dataLinsay et. al, PRA 53, 212
(1996).
33Direct and charge exchange differential cross
section for H at 5.0 keV on gaseous water.
Experimental pointsLinsay et. al. PRA 55, 3945
(1997).
34Total charge exchange cross section for H
colliding with C2H2 as a function of the
projectile energy.
Experimental data Kusakabe et. al. PRA 62,
062715 (2000).
35State to state total capture cross section for
the projectile in the 2s and 2p state when H
collids with H.
- Experimental data
- Hill et.al. JPB12 L341 (1979).
- Morgan et.al. Phys. Rev. A22, 1460 (1980).
36State to state total excitation cross section for
the 2s and 2p state when H collides with atomic
H.
37Trajectory for H colliding with H2 at 200 eV and
b0.5 a.u.
38Internuclear distances among the collision
partners for H colliding with H2 at 200 eV at
b0.5 a.u.
39Deflection function and trajectories at the plane
of the collision for H colliding with H2 at 200
eV
40Energy and impact parameter dependent deflection
function for H colliding with H2
41Direct differential cross section for H ? H? for
0.5, 1.5, and 5.0 keV projectile energies Dashed
lineCoupled-channel theory (DIM method). M.
Kimura et al., Phys. Rev. A33, 1619
(1986). Experimental dataR. S. Gao et al.,
Phys. Rev. A44, 5599 (1991).
42Direct differential cross sction for H colliding
with atomic and molecular H at 0.5, 1.5, and 5.0
keV.
Experimental pointsGao et. al. PRA 44, 5599
(1991) and Newman et. al. P J. Geophys. Res. 90,
11045 (1985).
43Electron capture and electron loss cross sections
for H, H ? H, H? for projectile energies from 10
eV up to 100 keV. Short-dashed lineM. Kimura,
Phys. Rev. A32, 802 (1985)
44Equilibrium charge fraction in a hydrogen beam on
H2 as a function of the projectile energy.
Experimental data Allison and Garcia-Munoz,
Proc. Roy. Soc. London A232, 423 (1955).
45Total energy loss for protons colliding with
molecular hydrogen as a function of the
projectile energy and impact parameter.
46Total stopping cross section for a hydrogen beam
colliding with atomic and molecular hydrogen.
Experimental dataNIMB 69, 18 (1992). PR 92, 742
(1953). PR 127, 792 (1962). NIMB 44, 399
(1990). PR 90, 532 (1953).
47(No Transcript)
48SUMMARY
- No restrictions as to projectile or target
charge state are made. - No restrictions are made on the collision
trajectory. - Projectile energy ranges from eV up to keV (until
ionization channel opens). - Results compare well with other theoretical
approaches and with available experimental data. - The method is computationally intensive, but very
general.
- In the works
- Free electrons - ionization and electron
projectiles. - State to state, vibrational and rotational energy
resolution.