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1.
J Phys Chem A ; 126(50): 9497-9509, 2022 Dec 22.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36480708

RESUMO

Dimethyl ether (DME) oxidation is a model chemical system with a small number of prototypical reaction intermediates that also has practical importance for low-carbon transportation. Although it has been studied experimentally and theoretically, ambiguity remains in the relative importance of competing DME oxidation pathways in the low-temperature autoignition regime. To focus on the primary reactions in DME autoignition, we measured the time-resolved concentration of five intermediates, CH3OCH2OO (ROO), OOCH2OCH2OOH (OOQOOH), HOOCH2OCHO (hydroperoxymethyl formate, HPMF), CH2O, and CH3OCHO (methyl formate, MF), from photolytically initiated experiments. We performed these studies at P = 10 bar and T = 450-575 K, using a high-pressure photolysis reactor coupled to a time-of-flight mass spectrometer with tunable vacuum-ultraviolet synchrotron ionization at the Advanced Light Source. Our measurements reveal that the timescale of ROO decay and product formation is much shorter than predicted by current DME combustion models. The models also strongly underpredict the observed yields of CH2O and MF and do not capture the temperature dependence of OOQOOH and HPMF yields. Adding the ROO + OH → RO + HO2 reaction to the chemical mechanism (with a rate coefficient approximated from similar reactions) improves the prediction of MF. Increasing the rate coefficients of ROO ↔ QOOH and QOOH + O2 ↔ OOQOOH reactions brings the model predictions closer to experimental observations for OOQOOH and HPMF, while increasing the rate coefficient for the QOOH → 2CH2O + OH reaction is needed to improve the predictions of formaldehyde. To aid future quantification of DME oxidation intermediates by photoionization mass spectrometry, we report experimentally determined ionization cross-sections for ROO, OOQOOH, and HPMF.

2.
Angew Chem Int Ed Engl ; 60(52): 27230-27235, 2021 Dec 20.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34605134

RESUMO

Rapid molecular-weight growth of hydrocarbons occurs in flames, in industrial synthesis, and potentially in cold astrochemical environments. A variety of high- and low-temperature chemical mechanisms have been proposed and confirmed, but more facile pathways may be needed to explain observations. We provide laboratory confirmation in a controlled pyrolysis environment of a recently proposed mechanism, radical-radical chain reactions of resonance-stabilized species. The recombination reaction of phenyl (c-C6 H5 ) and benzyl (c-C6 H5 CH2 ) radicals produces both diphenylmethane and diphenylmethyl radicals, the concentration of the latter increasing with rising temperature. A second phenyl addition to the product radical forms both triphenylmethane and triphenylmethyl radicals, confirming the propagation of radical-radical chain reactions under the experimental conditions of high temperature (1100-1600 K) and low pressure (ca. 3 kPa). Similar chain reactions may contribute to particle growth in flames, the interstellar medium, and industrial reactors.

3.
Science ; 364(6447)2019 06 28.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31249031

RESUMO

Light fields carrying orbital angular momentum (OAM) provide powerful capabilities for applications in optical communications, microscopy, quantum optics, and microparticle manipulation. We introduce a property of light beams, manifested as a temporal OAM variation along a pulse: the self-torque of light. Although self-torque is found in diverse physical systems (i.e., electrodynamics and general relativity), it was not realized that light could possess such a property. We demonstrate that extreme-ultraviolet self-torqued beams arise in high-harmonic generation driven by time-delayed pulses with different OAM. We monitor the self-torque of extreme-ultraviolet beams through their azimuthal frequency chirp. This class of dynamic-OAM beams provides the ability for controlling magnetic, topological, and quantum excitations and for manipulating molecules and nanostructures on their natural time and length scales.

4.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 114(52): E11072-E11081, 2017 12 26.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29109279

RESUMO

Highly excited electronic states are challenging to explore experimentally and theoretically-due to the large density of states and the fact that small structural changes lead to large changes in electronic character with associated strong nonadiabatic dynamics. They can play a key role in astrophysical and ionospheric chemistry, as well as the detonation chemistry of high-energy density materials. Here, we implement ultrafast vacuum-UV (VUV)-driven electron-ion coincidence imaging spectroscopy to directly probe the reaction pathways of highly excited states of energetic molecules-in this case, methyl azide. Our data, combined with advanced theoretical simulations, show that photoexcitation of methyl azide by a 10-fs UV pulse at 8 eV drives fast structural changes and strong nonadiabatic coupling that leads to relaxation to other excited states on a surprisingly fast timescale of 25 fs. This ultrafast relaxation differs from dynamics occurring on lower excited states, where the timescale required for the wavepacket to reach a region of strong nonadiabatic coupling is typically much longer. Moreover, our theoretical calculations show that ultrafast relaxation of the wavepacket to a lower excited state occurs along one of the conical intersection seams before reaching the minimum energy conical intersection. These findings are important for understanding the unique strongly coupled non-Born-Oppenheimer molecular dynamics of VUV-excited energetic molecules. Although such observations have been predicted for many years, this study represents one of the few where such strongly coupled non-Born-Oppenheimer molecular dynamics of VUV-excited energetic molecules have been conclusively observed directly, making it possible to identify the ultrafast reaction pathways.

5.
J Phys Chem A ; 121(28): 5280-5289, 2017 Jul 20.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28661692

RESUMO

We report the combination of tabletop vacuum ultraviolet photoionization with photoion-photoelectron coincidence spectroscopy for sensitive, isomer-specific detection of nascent products from a pyrolysis microreactor. Results on several molecules demonstrate two essential capabilities that are very straightforward to implement: the ability to differentiate isomers and the ability to distinguish thermal products from dissociative ionization. Here, vacuum ultraviolet light is derived from a commercial tabletop femtosecond laser system, allowing data to be collected at 10 kHz; this high repetition rate is critical for coincidence techniques. The photoion-photoelectron coincidence spectrometer uses the momentum of the ion to identify dissociative ionization events and coincidence techniques to provide a photoelectron spectrum specific to each mass, which is used to distinguish different isomers. We have used this spectrometer to detect the pyrolysis products that result from the thermal cracking of acetaldehyde, cyclohexene, and 2-butanol. The photoion-photoelectron spectrometer can detect and identify organic radicals and reactive intermediates that result from pyrolysis. Direct comparison of laboratory and synchrotron data illustrates the advantages and potential of this approach.

6.
J Phys Chem A ; 121(12): 2361-2366, 2017 Mar 30.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28267341

RESUMO

Understanding the ultrafast dynamics of highly excited electronic states of small molecules is critical for a better understanding of atmospheric and astrophysical processes, as well as for designing coherent control strategies for manipulating chemical dynamics. In highly excited states, nonadiabatic coupling, electron-electron interactions, and the high density of states govern dynamics. However, these states are computationally and experimentally challenging to access. Fortunately, new sources of ultrafast vacuum ultraviolet pulses, in combination with electron-ion coincidence spectroscopies, provide new tools to unravel the complex electronic landscape. Here we report time-resolved photoelectron-photoion coincidence experiments using 8 eV pump photons to study the highly excited states of acetone. We uncover for the first time direct evidence that the resulting excited state consists of a mixture of both ny → 3p and π → π* character, which decays with a time constant of 330 fs. In the future, this approach can inform models of VUV photochemistry and aid in designing coherent control strategies for manipulating chemical reactions.

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