Compartir
Título
Understanding the destruction of CH+ with atomic hydrogen at low temperatures: a non-adiabatic dynamical study
Autor(es)
Palabras clave
Astrochemistry
Non-adiabatic
Fecha de publicación
2025
Editor
The Royal Society of Chemistry
Citación
del Mazo-Sevillano, P., Aguado, A., Lique, F., Jara-Toro, R. A., & Roncero, O. (2025). Understanding the destruction of CH+ with atomic hydrogen at low temperatures: a non-adiabatic dynamical study. Physical Chemistry Chemical Physics, 27(29), 15775–15786. https://doi.org/10.1039/d5cp01718a
Resumen
[EN]Carbon hydrides play a crucial role in the formation of complex organic molecules in highly UV illuminated regions of the interstellar medium (ISM). The formation of CH+ is the first step in the reactions leading to the formation of various carbon hydrides. CH+ formation is relatively well understood with strong agreement between theoretical and experimental results. However, its destruction by collision with the H atom, at low temperatures of interest in the ISM, is in contrast still not well understood and there is a large discrepancy between theoretical and experimental data [R. Plasil et al., AstroPhys. J., 2011, 737, 1], which are almost an order of magnitude smaller than various classical and quantum mechanical calculations. In this work we have computed and fitted a new set of non-adiabatic potential energy surfaces (PES) for the title system, including the three lower adiabatic states. We then investigate three possible sources of disagreement with the experimental results: non-adiabatic effects from regions near the conical intersections, and rotational and vibrational excitation of the CH+ molecule. We conclude that vibrational excitation of the CH+ plays a major role in reducing the reactivity at low temperatures, and we raise the question of whether vibrational thermalization of the CH+ is not fully achieved in the experiment. Such non-thermalized conditions could explain the decrease of the measured reaction rate constant.
URI
ISSN
1463-9076
DOI
10.1039/d5cp01718a
Versión del editor
Aparece en las colecciones
- GIDM. Artículos [73]












