ScienceDaily
Your source for the latest research news
Follow Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Subscribe RSS Feeds Newsletters
New:
  • Solar Mission Images Reveal 'Campfires' On Sun
  • Oldest Light Confirms Age of the Universe
  • World Population to Shrink After Mid-Century
  • Global Methane Emissions Soar to Record High
  • COVID-19 Vaccine Generates Immune Response
  • Turning Female Mosquitoes Into Non-Biting Males
  • Is Planet Nine a Primordial Black Hole?
  • Like Humans, Beluga Whales Have Friends
  • Pampered Cats Along Silk Road 1,000 Years Ago
  • Tiny Ancient Relative of Dinosaurs, Pterosaurs
advertisement
Follow all of ScienceDaily's latest research news and top science headlines!
Science News
from research organizations

1

2

Ultracold mystery: Solved

By manipulating ultracold molecules mid-chemical reaction, researchers crack a molecular disappearing act

Date:
July 20, 2020
Source:
Harvard University
Summary:
Last December, researchers designed technology that could achieve the lowest temperature chemical reactions and then broke and formed the coldest bonds in the history of molecular coupling. Now, though reactions are considered too fast to measure, they determined the exact lifespan of their intermediate -- the space between reactants and products -- and solved the mystery of why some ultracold molecules simply disappear.
Share:
FULL STORY

In a famous parable, three blind men encounter an elephant for the first time. Each touches a part -- the trunk, ear, or side -- and concludes the creature is a thick snake, fan, or wall. This elephant, said Kang-Kuen Ni, is like the quantum world. Scientists can only explore a cell of this vast, unknown creature at a time. Now, Ni has revealed a few more to explore.

advertisement

It all started last December, when she and her team completed a new apparatus that could achieve the lowest temperature chemical reactions of any currently available technology and then broke and formed the coldest bonds in the history of molecular coupling. But their ultracold reactions also unexpectedly slowed the reaction to a sluggish speed, gifting the researchers with a real-time glimpse of what happens during a chemical transformation. Now, though reactions are considered too fast to measure, Ni not only determined the lifetime of that reaction, she solved an ultracold mystery in the process.

With ultracold chemistry, Ni, the Morris Kahn associate professor of chemistry and chemical biology and of physics, and her team cooled two potassium-rubidium molecules to just above absolute zero and found the "intermediate," the space where reactants transform into products, lived for about 360 nanoseconds (still billionths of a second, but long enough). "It's not the reactant. It's not the product. It's something in-between," Ni said. Watching that transformation, like touching the side of an elephant, can tell her something new about how molecules, the foundation of everything, work.

But they didn't just watch.

"This thing lives so long that now we can actually mess around with it... with light," said Yu Liu, a graduate student in the Graduate School of Arts and Sciences and first author on their study published in Nature Physics. "Typical complexes, like those in a room-temperature reaction, you wouldn't be able to do much with because they dissociate into products so quickly."

Like Star Trek tractor beams, lasers can trap and manipulate molecules. In ultracold physics, this is the go-to method to capture and control atoms, observe them in their quantum ground state or force them to react. But when scientists moved from manipulating atoms to messing with molecules, something strange happened: molecules started to disappear from view.

advertisement

"They prepared these molecules, hoping to realize many of the applications that they promise -- building quantum computers, for example -- but instead what they see is loss," Liu said.

Alkali atoms, like the potassium and rubidium Ni and her team study, are easy to cool down in the ultracold realm. In 1997, scientists won a Nobel Prize in Physics for cooling and trapping alkali atoms in laser light. But molecules are wonkier than atoms: They aren't just a spherical thing sitting there, said Liu, they can rotate and vibrate. When trapped together in the laser light, the gas molecules bumped against each other as expected, but some simply disappeared.

Scientists speculated that the molecular loss resulted from reactions -- two molecules bumped together and, instead of heading off in different directions, they transformed into new species. But how?

"What we found in this paper answers that question," Liu said. "The very thing that you use to confine the molecule is killing the molecule." In other words, it's the light's fault.

When Liu and Ni used lasers to manipulate that intermediate complex -- the middle of their chemical reaction -- they discovered the light forced the molecules off their typical reaction path and into a new one. A pair of molecules, stuck together as an intermediate complex, can get "photo-excited" instead of following their traditional path, Liu said. Alkali molecules are particularly susceptible because of how long they live in their intermediate complex.

advertisement

"Basically, if you want to eliminate loss," Liu said, "you've got to turn off the light. You've got to find another way to trap these things." Magnets, for example, or electric fields can trap molecules, too. "But these are all technically demanding," said Liu. Light is just simpler.

Next, Ni wants to see where these complexes go when they disappear. Certain wavelengths of light (like the infrared the team used to excite their potassium-rubidium molecules) can create different reaction paths -- but no one knows which wavelengths send molecules into which new formations.

They also plan to explore what the complex looks like at various stages of transformation. "To probe its structure," Liu said, "we can vary the frequency of the light and see how the degree of excitation varies. From there, we can figure out where the energy levels of this thing are, which informs on its quantum mechanical construct."

"We hope this will serve as a model system," Ni said, an example for how researchers can explore other low temperature reactions that don't involve potassium and rubidium.

"This reaction is, like many other chemical reactions, sort of a universe in its own," said Liu. With each new observation, the team reveals a tiny piece of the giant quantum elephant. Since there are an infinite number of chemical reactions in the known universe, there's still a long, long way to go.

make a difference: sponsored opportunity

Story Source:

Materials provided by Harvard University. Original written by Caitlin McDermott-Murphy. Note: Content may be edited for style and length.


Journal Reference:

  1. Yu Liu, Ming-Guang Hu, Matthew A. Nichols, David D. Grimes, Tijs Karman, Hua Guo, Kang-Kuen Ni. Photo-excitation of long-lived transient intermediates in ultracold reactions. Nature Physics, 2020; DOI: 10.1038/s41567-020-0968-8

Cite This Page:

  • MLA
  • APA
  • Chicago
Harvard University. "Ultracold mystery: Solved: By manipulating ultracold molecules mid-chemical reaction, researchers crack a molecular disappearing act." ScienceDaily. ScienceDaily, 20 July 2020. <www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2020/07/200720112331.htm>.
Harvard University. (2020, July 20). Ultracold mystery: Solved: By manipulating ultracold molecules mid-chemical reaction, researchers crack a molecular disappearing act. ScienceDaily. Retrieved July 20, 2020 from www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2020/07/200720112331.htm
Harvard University. "Ultracold mystery: Solved: By manipulating ultracold molecules mid-chemical reaction, researchers crack a molecular disappearing act." ScienceDaily. www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2020/07/200720112331.htm (accessed July 20, 2020).

  • RELATED TOPICS
    • Matter & Energy
      • Chemistry
      • Organic Chemistry
      • Optics
      • Physics
      • Inorganic Chemistry
      • Quantum Physics
      • Nature of Water
      • Biochemistry
advertisement

  • RELATED TERMS
    • Autocatalysis
    • Catalysis
    • Chemical bond
    • Polymer
    • Radical (chemistry)
    • Absolute zero
    • Tropospheric ozone
    • Chemical compound

1

2

3

4

5
RELATED STORIES

Key Components of Proteins Are Twisted to Boost Reactions Useful to Medicine
May 28, 2020 — In proteins, amino acids are held together by amide bonds. These bonds are long-lived and are robust against changes in temperature, acidity or alkalinity. Certain medicines make use of reactions ...
Visible Light and Nanoparticle Catalysts Produce Desirable Bioactive Molecules
Oct. 30, 2019 — Chemists have used visible light and extremely tiny nanoparticles to quickly and simply make molecules that are of the same class as many lead compounds for drug development. Driven by light, the ...
In a First, Tiny Diamond Anvils Trigger Chemical Reactions by Squeezing
Feb. 21, 2018 — Scientists have turned the smallest possible bits of diamond and other super-hard specks into 'molecular anvils' that squeeze and twist molecules until chemical bonds break and atoms ...
How Selenium Compounds Might Become Catalysts
July 13, 2017 — A new approach for activating chemical reactions based on the element selenium has been tested by scientists. They demonstrated that selenium can form bonds similar to those of hydrogen bonds, ...
FROM AROUND THE WEB

Below are relevant articles that may interest you. ScienceDaily shares links with scholarly publications in the TrendMD network and earns revenue from third-party advertisers, where indicated.
  Print   Email   Share

advertisement

1

2

3

4

5
Most Popular
this week

SPACE & TIME
Scientists Propose Plan to Determine If Planet Nine Is a Primordial Black Hole
New Research of Oldest Light Confirms Age of the Universe
Solar Orbiter's First Images Reveal 'Campfires' on the Sun
MATTER & ENERGY
The Best Material for Homemade Face Masks May Be a Combination of Two Fabrics
Breakthrough Blood Test Detects Positive COVID-19 Result in 20 Minutes
The Best (and Worst) Materials for Masks
COMPUTERS & MATH
Artificial 'Neurotransistor' Created
The First Intuitive Programming Language for Quantum Computers
Robot Jaws Shows Medicated Chewing Gum Could Be the Future
advertisement

Strange & Offbeat
 

SPACE & TIME
Could Mini-Neptunes Be Irradiated Ocean Planets?
Separating Gamma-Ray Bursts: Students Make Critical Breakthrough
How Galaxies Die: New Insights Into the Quenching of Star Formation
MATTER & ENERGY
Atomtronic Device Could Probe Boundary Between Quantum, Everyday Worlds
Evidence for Decades-Old Theory to Explain the Odd Behaviors of Water
'Blinking' Crystals May Convert CO2 Into Fuels
COMPUTERS & MATH
A GoPro for Beetles: Researchers Create a Robotic Camera Backpack for Insects
Giving Robots Human-Like Perception of Their Physical Environments
Researchers Gives Robots Intelligent Sensing Abilities to Carry out Complex Tasks
SD
  • SD
    • Home Page
    • Top Science News
    • Latest News
  • Home
    • Home Page
    • Top Science News
    • Latest News
  • Health
    • View all the latest top news in the health sciences,
      or browse the topics below:
      Health & Medicine
      • Allergy
      • Alternative Medicine
      • Birth Control
      • Cancer
      • Diabetes
      • Diseases
      • Heart Disease
      • HIV and AIDS
      • Obesity
      • Stem Cells
      • ... more topics
      Mind & Brain
      • ADD and ADHD
      • Addiction
      • Alzheimer's
      • Autism
      • Depression
      • Headaches
      • Intelligence
      • Psychology
      • Relationships
      • Schizophrenia
      • ... more topics
      Living Well
      • Parenting
      • Pregnancy
      • Sexual Health
      • Skin Care
      • Men's Health
      • Women's Health
      • Nutrition
      • Diet and Weight Loss
      • Fitness
      • Healthy Aging
      • ... more topics
  • Tech
    • View all the latest top news in the physical sciences & technology,
      or browse the topics below:
      Matter & Energy
      • Aviation
      • Chemistry
      • Electronics
      • Fossil Fuels
      • Nanotechnology
      • Physics
      • Quantum Physics
      • Solar Energy
      • Technology
      • Wind Energy
      • ... more topics
      Space & Time
      • Astronomy
      • Black Holes
      • Dark Matter
      • Extrasolar Planets
      • Mars
      • Moon
      • Solar System
      • Space Telescopes
      • Stars
      • Sun
      • ... more topics
      Computers & Math
      • Artificial Intelligence
      • Communications
      • Computer Science
      • Hacking
      • Mathematics
      • Quantum Computers
      • Robotics
      • Software
      • Video Games
      • Virtual Reality
      • ... more topics
  • Enviro
    • View all the latest top news in the environmental sciences,
      or browse the topics below:
      Plants & Animals
      • Agriculture and Food
      • Animals
      • Biology
      • Biotechnology
      • Endangered Animals
      • Extinction
      • Genetically Modified
      • Microbes and More
      • New Species
      • Zoology
      • ... more topics
      Earth & Climate
      • Climate
      • Earthquakes
      • Environment
      • Geography
      • Geology
      • Global Warming
      • Hurricanes
      • Ozone Holes
      • Pollution
      • Weather
      • ... more topics
      Fossils & Ruins
      • Ancient Civilizations
      • Anthropology
      • Archaeology
      • Dinosaurs
      • Early Humans
      • Early Mammals
      • Evolution
      • Lost Treasures
      • Origin of Life
      • Paleontology
      • ... more topics
  • Society
    • View all the latest top news in the social sciences & education,
      or browse the topics below:
      Science & Society
      • Arts & Culture
      • Consumerism
      • Economics
      • Political Science
      • Privacy Issues
      • Public Health
      • Racial Disparity
      • Religion
      • Sports
      • World Development
      • ... more topics
      Business & Industry
      • Biotechnology & Bioengineering
      • Computers & Internet
      • Energy & Resources
      • Engineering
      • Medical Technology
      • Pharmaceuticals
      • Transportation
      • ... more topics
      Education & Learning
      • Animal Learning & Intelligence
      • Creativity
      • Educational Psychology
      • Educational Technology
      • Infant & Preschool Learning
      • Learning Disorders
      • STEM Education
      • ... more topics
  • Quirky
    • Top News
    • Human Quirks
    • Odd Creatures
    • Bizarre Things
    • Weird World
Free Subscriptions

Get the latest science news with ScienceDaily's free email newsletters, updated daily and weekly. Or view hourly updated newsfeeds in your RSS reader:

  • Email Newsletters
  • RSS Feeds
Follow Us

Keep up to date with the latest news from ScienceDaily via social networks:

  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • LinkedIn
Have Feedback?

Tell us what you think of ScienceDaily -- we welcome both positive and negative comments. Have any problems using the site? Questions?

  • Leave Feedback
  • Contact Us
About This Site  |  Staff  |  Reviews  |  Contribute  |  Advertise  |  Privacy Policy  |  Editorial Policy  |  Terms of Use
Copyright 2020 ScienceDaily or by other parties, where indicated. All rights controlled by their respective owners.
Content on this website is for information only. It is not intended to provide medical or other professional advice.
Views expressed here do not necessarily reflect those of ScienceDaily, its staff, its contributors, or its partners.
Financial support for ScienceDaily comes from advertisements and referral programs, where indicated.
— CCPA: Do Not Sell My Information — — GDPR: Privacy Settings —