A study of the dissociative recombination of CaO+ with electrons: Implications for Ca chemistry in the upper atmosphere

Loading...
Thumbnail Image
Date
2016
Volume
43
Issue
24
Journal
Series Titel
Book Title
Publisher
Hoboken, NJ : Wiley
Link to publishers version
Abstract

The dissociative recombination of CaO+ ions with electrons has been studied in a flowing afterglow reactor. CaO+ was generated by the pulsed laser ablation of a Ca target, followed by entrainment in an Ar+ ion/electron plasma. A kinetic model describing the gas-phase chemistry and diffusion to the reactor walls was fitted to the experimental data, yielding a rate coefficient of (3.0 ± 1.0) × 10−7 cm3 molecule−1 s−1 at 295 K. This result has two atmospheric implications. First, the surprising observation that the Ca+/Fe+ ratio is ~8 times larger than Ca/Fe between 90 and 100 km in the atmosphere can now be explained quantitatively by the known ion-molecule chemistry of these two metals. Second, the rate of neutralization of Ca+ ions in a descending sporadic E layer is fast enough to explain the often explosive growth of sporadic neutral Ca layers.

Description
Keywords
dissociative electron recombination, ion-molecule chemistry, meteoric metal layers, sporadic layers
Citation
Bones, D. L., Gerding, M., Höffner, J., Gómez Martín, J. C., & Plane, J. M. C. (2016). A study of the dissociative recombination of CaO+ with electrons: Implications for Ca chemistry in the upper atmosphere. 43(24). https://doi.org//10.1002/2016GL071755
License
CC BY-NC-ND 4.0 Unported