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We have compiled gas phase enthalpies of formation for nine hydrogen-oxygen species (HxOy) and selected recommended values for H, O, OH, H2O, HO2, H2O2, O3, HO3, and H2O3. The compilation consists of values derived from experimental measurements, quantum chemical calculations, and prior evaluations. This work updates the recommended values in the NIST-JANAF (1985) and Gurvich et al. (1989) thermochemical tables for seven species. For two species, HO3 and H2O3 (important in atmospheric chemistry) and not found in prior thermochemical evaluations, we also provide supplementary data consisting of molecular geometries, vibrational frequencies, and torsional potentials which can be used to compute thermochemical functions. For all species, we also provide supplementary data consisting of zero point energies, vibrational frequencies, and ion reaction energetics.
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In this article, the first-principles prediction of enthalpies of formation is demonstrated for 669 polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbon (PAH) compounds and a number of related functionalized molecules. It is shown that by extrapolating density functional theory calculations to a large basis set limit and then applying a group based correction scheme that good results may be obtained. Specifically, a mean unsigned deviation and root mean squared deviation from the experimental enthalpies of formation data of 5.0 and 6.4 kJ/mol, respectively, are obtained using this scheme. This computational scheme is economical to compute and straightforward to apply, while yielding results of reasonable reliability. The results are also compared for a smaller set of molecules to the predictions given by the G3B3 and G3MP2B3 variants of the Gaussian-3 model chemistry with a mean unsigned deviation and root mean squared deviation from the experimental enthalpies of formation of 4.5 and 4.8 kJ/mol, respectively.
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Hidrocarburos Policíclicos Aromáticos/química , Teoría Cuántica , Termodinámica , Estructura MolecularRESUMEN
Recent studies have shown that 254 nm light can be used to generate organic aerosol from iodoalkane/air mixtures via photodissociation of the C-I bond and subsequent oxidation of the alkyl radical. We examine organic aerosol formed from the 1-iodooctane photolysis at this wavelength using high-performance liquid chromatography (HPLC) with derivatization to selectively probe carbonyl- and hydroxyl-containing molecules. Tandem mass spectrometry reveals that the product distributions are much more complex than a traditional low-NOx peroxy-peroxy oxidation mechanism from a single parent isomer would justify. We propose that this difference is due to peroxy radical photochemistry, leading to two major channels: direct peroxy radical isomerization via internal H-abstraction and reverse dissociation to form alkyl radical and O2. The complexity of the product spectrum is derived from both scrambling of the radical site in the alkyl radical and the additional oxidation of otherwise stable peroxy radicals as a result of the isomerization. A branching ratio for these channels is estimated using a canonical representation of the internal energy distribution. Lifetime estimates using extrapolated ethyl peroxy absorption cross sections and the actinic flux near 310 nm show that peroxy radical photochemistry may play a role in defining the composition of atmospheric secondary organic aerosol formed in pristine (low-NOx) environments.
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The decomposition and intramolecular H-transfer isomerization reactions of the 1-pentyl radical have been studied at temperatures of 880 to 1055 K and pressures of 80 to 680 kPa using the single pulse shock tube technique and additionally investigated with quantum chemical methods. The 1-pentyl radical was generated by shock heating dilute mixtures of 1-iodopentane and the stable products of its decomposition have been observed by postshock gas chromatographic analysis. Ethene and propene are the main olefin products and account for >97% of the carbon balance from 1-pentyl. Also produced are very small amounts of (E)-2-pentene, (Z)-2-pentene, and 1-butene. The ethene/propene product ratio is pressure dependent and varies from about 3 to 5 over the range of temperatures and pressures studied. Formation of ethene and propene can be related to the concentrations of 1-pentyl and 2-pentyl radicals in the system and the relative rates of five-center intramolecular H-transfer reactions and ß C-C bond scissions. The 3-pentyl radical, formed via a four-center intramolecular H transfer, leads to 1-butene and plays only a very minor role in the system. The observed (E/Z)-2-pentenes can arise from a small amount of beta C-H bond scission in the 2-pentyl radical. The current experimental and computational results are considered in conjunction with relevant literature data from lower temperatures to develop a consistent kinetics model that reproduces the observed branching ratios and pressure effects. The present experimental results provide the first available data on the pressure dependence of the olefin product branching ratio for alkyl radical decomposition at high temperatures and require a value of <ΔE(down)(1000 K)> = (675 ± 100) cm(-1) for the average energy transferred in deactivating collisions in an argon bath gas when an exponential-down model is employed. High pressure rate expressions for the relevant H-transfer reactions and ß bond scissions are derived and a Rice Ramsberger Kassel Marcus/Master Equation (RRKM/ME) analysis has been performed and used to extrapolate the data to temperatures between 700 and 1900 K and pressures of 10 to 1 × 10(5) kPa.
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The Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices recommends that susceptible people traveling to developing countries receive hepatitis A vaccine or immune globulin prior to departure. Until 2009, the recommendations did not address non-traveling family members or other close contacts of international adoptees. We report an outbreak of hepatitis A in 2008 that occurred in Maine. Eight members of an extended family developed hepatitis A following the arrival of an asymptomatic infant from Ethiopia who was brought to the United States by an adoption agency. Two children in the family attended an elementary school where five additional cases of hepatitis A were subsequently identified. Only three (1%) of 208 students at the school had previously been immunized against hepatitis A. This outbreak highlights the need to immunize household members and other close contacts of families adopting children from countries where hepatitis A is endemic, as well as all children at one year of age.
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Adopción , Brotes de Enfermedades , Salud de la Familia , Hepatitis A/epidemiología , Adolescente , Adulto , Niño , Guarderías Infantiles , Preescolar , Trazado de Contacto , Brotes de Enfermedades/prevención & control , Etiopía/etnología , Femenino , Hepatitis A/prevención & control , Humanos , Inmunización , Lactante , Maine/epidemiología , Persona de Mediana Edad , Instituciones Académicas , ViajeRESUMEN
Composite ab initio and density functional theory (DFT) methods were used to explore internal hydrogen-atom transfers in a variety of primary, secondary, and tertiary alkyl and functionalized radicals with implications for combustion environments. The composite ab initio method G3MP2B3 was found to achieve the most reasonable balance between accuracy and economy in modeling the energetics of these reactions. Increased alkyl substitution reduced barriers to isomerization by about 10 and 20 kJ mol(-1) for secondary and tertiary radical formation, respectively, relative to primary radical reactions and was relatively insensitive to the transition-state ring size (extent of H-atom internal shift). Reactions involving alkenyl and alkanoyl radicals were also explored. Hydrogen-atom transfers involving allylic radical formation demonstrated barrier heights that were 15-20 kJ mol(-1) lower than those in corresponding alkyl radicals, whereas those involving oxoallylic species (alpha-site radicals of aldehydes and ketones) were 20-40 kJ mol(-1) lower. In the cases of the alkyl radicals, enthalpies of activation were seen to scale with enthalpies of reaction. This correlation was not seen, however, in the cases of the allylic and oxoallylic radicals; this fact has significant implications in combustion chemistry and mechanism development, considering that such Evans-Polanyi correlations are widely used in estimating barrier heights for rate expressions.