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Atoms found to interact unexpectedly
July 2, 2008
World Science staff
A newfound type of interaction between atoms may change our understanding of certain chemical reactions in the atmosphere and in our bodies, scientists say.
Imagine a simple molecule consisting of two atoms as being like two balls linked by a spring. If an atom strikes one side of the molecule, the spring compresses and you’d expect the molecule to jump backwards.
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A still from an animation
of atomic scattering. in the new study (Courtesy Eckart Wrede,
University of Durham)
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However, the new research suggests that surprisingly, in certain conditions the molecule jumps forwards, not backwards.
The reaction amounts to a new form of energy-transfer, according to the investigators, who reported the findings in the July 3 issue of the research journal
Nature.
They studied fast hydrogen atoms colliding with cooled molecules built of deuterium, a variant of hydrogen. When the collision does not result in a chemical reaction, the hydrogen atoms scatter.
In these so-called inelastic processes, the hydrogen atom normally scatters backwards. But in this case, the team found that the process unexpectedly led mainly to forward scattering.
“The reaction under study is the simplest chemical reaction possible and yet it still continues to surprise us, even after 80 years” of analysis, said chemist Stuart Greaves at the University of Bristol, U.K., a co-author of the report. “Our work provides another vital piece of the jigsaw for understanding the mechanics of chemical reactions, such as those going on in the atmosphere.”
The findings have “changed a very simple idea that we cherished”—that to make a molecule vibrate strongly, “you basically had to crush it, squeeze it, hit it over the head. Compress some bond and the molecule would snap back,” said Richard Zare, a chemist at Stanford University in California who led the research. “We found quite the opposite.”
The explanation of the events is that even if the hydrogen atom flies past the molecule—which consists of two deuterium atoms—in a “grazing collision,” this can tug on the deuterium atom nearest to it, Greaves said. This stretches the bond linking the two deuterium atoms, causing the molecule to move forwards.
The authors suggest that this “tug-of-war” behaviour may come into play whenever a strong attraction develops between the colliding partners, just as Moon’s gravitation “pulls” at water on Earth.
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A newfound type of interaction between atoms may change our understanding of certain chemical reactions in the atmosphere and in our bodies, scientists say.
Imagine a simple molecule consisting of two atoms as being like two balls linked by a spring. If an atom strikes one side of the molecule, the spring compresses and you’d expect the molecule to jump backwards.
However, the new research suggests that surprisingly, in certain conditions the molecule jumps forwards, not backwards. The reaction amounts to a new form of energy-transfer, according to the investigators, who reported the findings in the July 3 issue of the research journal Nature.
They studied fast hydrogen atoms colliding with cooled molecules built of deuterium, a variant of hydrogen. When the collision does not result in a chemical reaction, the hydrogen atoms scatter. In these so-called inelastic processes, the hydrogen atom normally scatters backwards. But in this case, the team found that the process unexpectedly led mainly to forward scattering.
“The reaction under study is the simplest chemical reaction possible and yet it still continues to surprise us, even after 80 years” of analysis, said chemist Stuart Greaves at the University of Bristol, U.K., a co-author of the report. “Our work provides another vital piece of the jigsaw for understanding the mechanics of chemical reactions, such as those going on in the atmosphere.”
The findings have “changed a very simple idea that we cherished”—that to make a molecule vibrate strongly, “you basically had to crush it, squeeze it, hit it over the head. Compress some bond and the molecule would snap back,” said Richard Zare, a chemist at Stanford University in California who led the research. “We found quite the opposite.”
The explanation of the events is that even if the hydrogen atom flies past the molecule—which consists of two deuterium atoms—in a “grazing collision,” this can tug on the deuterium atom nearest to it, Greaves said. This stretches the bond linking the two deuterium atoms, causing the molecule to move forwards.
The authors suggest that this “tug-of-war” behaviour may come into play whenever a strong attraction develops between the colliding partners, just as Moon’s gravitation “pulls” at the water on Earth.
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