RESUMEN
Ortho-benzyne is a potentially important precursor for polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbon formation, but much is still unknown about its chemistry. In this work, we report on a combined experimental and theoretical study of the o-benzyne + acetylene reaction and employ double imaging threshold photoelectron photoion coincidence spectroscopy to investigate the reaction products with isomer specificity. Based on photoion mass-selected threshold photoelectron spectra, Franck-Condon simulations, and ionization cross section calculations, we conclude that phenylacetylene and benzocyclobutadiene (PA : BCBdiene) are formed at a non-equilibrium ratio of 2 : 1, respectively, in a pyrolysis microreactor at a temperature of 1050 K and a pressure of â¼20 mbar. The C8H6 potential energy surface (PES) is explored to rationalize the formation of the reaction products. Previously unidentified pathways have been found by considering the open-shell singlet (OSS) character of various C8H6 reactive intermediates. Based on the PES data, a kinetic model is constructed to estimate equilibrium abundances of the two products. New insights into the reaction mechanism - with a focus on the OSS intermediates - and the products formed in the o-benzyne + acetylene reaction provide a greater level of understanding of the o-benzyne reactivity during the formation of aromatic hydrocarbons in combustion environments as well as in outflows of carbon-rich stars.
RESUMEN
The reaction kinetics of the isomers of the methylallyl radical with molecular oxygen has been studied in a flow tube reactor at the vacuum ultraviolet (VUV) beamline of the Swiss Light Source storage ring. The radicals were generated by direct photodissociation of bromides or iodides at 213 nm. Experiments were conducted at room temperature and low pressures between 1 and 3 mbar using He as the buffer gas. Oxygen was employed in excess to maintain near pseudo-first-order reaction conditions. Concentration-time profiles of the radical were monitored by photoionisation. For the oxidation of 2-methylallyl (2-MA) and with k(2-MA + O2) = (5.1 ± 1.0) × 1011 cm3 mol-1 s-1, the rate constant was found to be in the high-pressure limit already at 1 mbar. In contrast, 1-methylallyl exists in two isomers, E- and Z-1-methylallyl. We selectively detected the E-conformer as well as a mixture of both isomers and observed almost identical rate constants within the uncertainty of the experiment. A small pressure dependence is observed with the rate constant increasing from k(1-MA + O2) = (3.5 ± 0.7) × 1011 cm3 mol-1 s-1 at 1 mbar to k(1-MA + O2) = (4.6 ± 0.9) × 1011 cm3 mol-1 s-1 at 3 mbar. While for 2-methylallyl + O2 no previous experimental data are available, the rate constants for 1-methylallyl are in agreement with previous work. A comparison is drawn for the trends of the high-pressure limiting rate constants and pressure dependences observed for the O2 recombination of allylic radicals with the corresponding reactions of alkyl radicals.
RESUMEN
The reaction products of the picolyl radicals at high temperature were characterized by mass-selective threshold photoelectron spectroscopy in the gas phase. Aminomethylpyridines were pyrolyzed to initially produce picolyl radicals (m/z=92). At higher temperatures further thermal reaction products are generated in the pyrolysis reactor. All compounds were identified by mass-selected threshold photoelectron spectroscopy and several hitherto unexplored reactive molecules were characterized. The mechanism for several dissociation pathways was outlined in computations. The spectrum of m/z=91, resulting from hydrogen loss of picolyl, shows four isomers, two ethynyl pyrroles with adiabatic ionization energies (IEad ) of 7.99â eV (2-ethynyl-1H-pyrrole) and 8.12â eV (3-ethynyl-1H-pyrrole), and two cyclopentadiene carbonitriles with IE's of 9.14â eV (cyclopenta-1,3-diene-1-carbonitrile) and 9.25â eV (cyclopenta-1,4-diene-1-carbonitrile). A second consecutive hydrogen loss forms the cyanocyclopentadienyl radical with IE's of 9.07â eV (T0 ) and 9.21â eV (S1 ). This compound dissociates further to acetylene and the cyanopropynyl radical (IE=9.35â eV). Furthermore, the cyclopentadienyl radical, penta-1,3-diyne, cyclopentadiene and propargyl were identified in the spectra. Computations indicate that dissociation of picolyl proceeds initially via a resonance-stabilized seven-membered ring.
RESUMEN
Iodine oxides appear as reactive intermediates in atmospheric chemistry. Here, we investigate IO and HOI by mass-selective threshold photoelectron spectroscopy (ms-TPES), using synchrotron radiation. IO and HOI are generated by photolyzing iodine in the presence of ozone. For both molecules, accurate ionization energies are determined, 9.71±0.02â eV for IO and 9.79±0.02â eV for HOI. The strong spin-spin interaction in the 3 Σ- ground state of IO+ leads to an energy splitting into the Ω=0 and Ω=±1 sublevels. Upon ionization, the I-O bond shortens significantly in both molecules; thus, a vibrational progression, assigned to the I-O stretch, is apparent in both spectra.
RESUMEN
Mass-selective threshold photoelectron spectroscopy in the gas phase was employed to characterize the dialkynyl triplet carbenes pentadiynylidene (HC5H), methylpentadiynylidene (MeC5H), and dimethylpentadiynylidene (MeC5Me). Diazo compounds were employed as precursors to generate the carbenes by flash pyrolysis. The R1-C5-R2 carbon chains were photoionized by vacuum ultraviolet (VUV) synchrotron radiation in photoelectron photoion coincidence (PEPICO) experiments. High-level ab initio computations were carried out to support the interpretation of the experiments. For the unsubstituted pentadiynylidene (R1 = R2 = H) the recorded spectrum yields an adiabatic ionization energy (IEad) of 8.36 ± 0.03 eV. In addition, a second carbene isomer, 3-(didehydrovinylidene)cyclopropene, with a singlet electronic ground state, was identified in the spectrum based on the IEad of 8.60 ± 0.03 eV and Franck-Condon simulations. We found that multireference computations are required to reliably calculate the IEad for this molecule. CASPT2 computations predicted an IEad = 8.55 eV, while coupled-cluster computations significantly overestimate the IE. The cyclic isomer is most likely formed from another isomer of the precursor present in the sample. Stepwise methyl-substitution of the carbene leads to a reduction of the IE to 7.77 ± 0.04 eV for methylpentadiynylidene and 7.27 ± 0.06 eV for dimethylpentadiynylidene. The photoionization and dissociative photoionization of the precursors is investigated as well.
RESUMEN
The ultrafast photophysics and photochemistry of benzocyclobutenedione (BCBD) dissolved in dichloromethane is investigated by transient absorption spectroscopy in both the IR and the UV/Vis regime. The molecule is excited at 300 nm to the S3 (ππ*) state and a time scale from roughly 100 fs to several nanoseconds is covered. The initially excited S3 deactivates quickly to the lower-lying S1 (nπ*) state. Three parallel photochemical reaction pathways starting in the S1 state that compete with deactivation to S0 are identified in the transient IR spectra, two of them consisting of a sequence of steps. DFT/TDDFT calculations of the normal modes of the reactant and various photoproducts support the analysis of the transient spectra. The rapid internal conversion (IC) to the S1 state of BCBD is followed by a sub-picosecond vibrational relaxation (VR) to S1 (ν = 0). In parallel BCBD loses one carbonyl group and forms benzocyclopropenone, which subsequently rearranges to cyclopentadienylidene ketene. Ring opening in the S1 (ν = 0) state produces vibrationally hot bisketene, which cools within 22 ps. This reaction competes with the intramolecular rearrangement to singlet oxacarbene, which subsequently converts into the triplet carbene via intersystem crossing (ISC). The late-time product identified in the transient UV/Vis spectra is probably due to dimerization of the carbene. Molecular dynamics (MD) simulations of the early-time photochemistry of BCBD successfully reproduce the formation of the three main photoproducts.
RESUMEN
ortho-Benzyne, a Kekulé-type biradical is considered to be a key intermediate in the formation of polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAH) and soot. In the present work we study the ortho-benzyne self-reactions in a hot microreactor and identify the high-temperature products by IR/UV spectroscopy and by photoion mass-selected threshold photoelectron spectroscopy (ms-TPES) in a free jet. Ms-TPES confirms formation of ortho-benzyne as generated from benzocyclobutenedione, as well as benzene, biphenylene, diacetylene, and acetylene, originating from the reaction o-C6H4 â HCC-CCH + C2H2, and CH3. PAH molecules like naphthalene, 2-ethynylnaphthalene, fluorene, phenanthrene, and triphenylene are identified based on their IR/UV spectra. By comparison with recent computations their formation starting from o-benzyne can be readily understood and supports the importance of the biradical addition (1,4-cycloaddition followed by fragmentation) pathway to PAH molecules, recently proposed by Comandini et al.
RESUMEN
Nitrogen-containing resonance-stabilized radicals such as the picolyl radical are important in combustion chemistry and astrochemistry. They have only been scarcely studied because an isomer-selective generation is often difficult. Herein, we present threshold photoelectron spectra of the three picolyl radical isomers, C6 H6 N, that were obtained with synchrotron radiation. The radicals were selectively generated by flash pyrolysis from aminomethylpyridine precursors through deamination. Ionization energies of 7.70, 7.59, and 8.01â eV were determined for 2-, 3-, and 4-picolyl, respectively. The observed vibrational structure was assigned to an in-plane deformation mode of the aromatic ring. The spectroscopic insight gained in this study can be used to distinguish different picolyl isomers in on-line combustion analysis, for example.
RESUMEN
Carbon chains with an odd number of C atoms are reactive intermediates with a high biradical character. Here we report a joint experimental and computational investigation of the dynamics of diphenylpropynylidene, C6H5-C3-C6H5, in dichloromethane and ethanol. The biradical is generated by ultraviolet light from 1,3-diphenyldiazopropyne. Electron paramagnetic resonance spectra are recorded to elucidate the spin multiplicity and geometry of the biradical. In both solvents a triplet ground state at 4 K is verified. Transient absorption spectra provide insight into the fate of the biradical. A study in deaerated dichloromethane permits us to follow the photophysics of diphenylpropynylidene and to extract time constants for its vibrational as well as electronic relaxation. In the presence of oxygen, a more complex photochemistry is observed that permits us to derive a model for the reaction of the biradical with O2. In ethanol, the spectra recorded in the presence and absence of O2 are very similar, which can be explained by the similarity of the chromophores of the reaction products.
RESUMEN
Polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs) play an important role in chemistry both in the terrestrial setting and in the interstellar medium. Various, albeit often inefficient, chemical mechanisms have been proposed to explain PAH formation, but few yield polycyclic hydrocarbons cleanly. Alternative and quite promising pathways have been suggested to address these shortcomings with key starting reactants including resonance stabilized radicals (RSRs) and o-benzyne. Here we report on a combined experimental and theoretical study of the reaction allyl + o-benzyne. Indene was found to be the primary product and statistical modeling predicts only 0.1% phenylallene and 0.1% 3-phenyl-1-propyne as side products. The quantitative and likely barrierless formation of indene yields important insights into the role resonance stabilized radicals play in the formation of polycyclic hydrocarbons.
RESUMEN
We report the generation, spectroscopic characterization, and computational analysis of the first free (non-stabilized) organometallic bismuthinidene, BiMe. The title compound was generated in situ from BiMe3 by controlled homolytic Bi-C bond cleavage in the gas phase. Its electronic structure was characterized by a combination of photoion mass-selected threshold photoelectron spectroscopy and DFT as well as multi-reference computations. A triplet ground state was identified and an ionization energy (IE) of 7.88 eV was experimentally determined. Methyl abstraction from BiMe3 to give [BiMe2]⢠is a key step in the generation of BiMe. We reaveal a bond dissociation energy of 210 ± 7 kJ mol-1, which is substantially higher than the previously accepted value. Nevertheless, the homolytic cleavage of Me-BiMe2 bonds could be achieved at moderate temperatures (60-120 °C) in the condensed phase, suggesting that [BiMe2]⢠and BiMe are accessible as reactive intermediates under these conditions.
RESUMEN
Diborenes, R-BB-R', are of current interest in inorganic chemistry because they offer the opportunity to tune the properties of a biradical by modifying the substituents of the diborene parent, HBBH. Here we synthesize the elusive diborene by H atom abstraction from diborane, B2H6, using fluorine atoms and report a vibrationally resolved photoelectron spectrum of the HBBH biradical. The spectrum is interpreted by comparison with high-level ab initio computations, taking into account the Renner-Teller splitting in the X+ 2Π ionic ground state, which show an excellent agreement with the experimental spectrum. An adiabatic ionization energy of 9.080 ± 0.015 eV was determined, and a vibrational progression in the boron-boron stretching vibration of 0.14 eV is visible. This is due to the reduction of bond order upon ionization, accompanied by an increase of the computed boron-boron bond length, RBB, from 1.514 to 1.606 Å.