Direct Measurement of Criegee Intermediate (CH2OO) Reactions with Acetone Acetaldehyde and Hexafluoroacetone
Proposed for publication in Physical Chemistry Chemical Physics.
Abstract not provided.
Proposed for publication in Physical Chemistry Chemical Physics.
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Proposed for publication in Proceedings of the Combustion Institute.
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Proposed for publication in Proceedings of the Combustion Institute.
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Physical Chemistry Chemical Physics
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Journal of Physical Chemistry A
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%22International Journal of Mass Spectrometry%22
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Science
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Physical Chemistry Chemical Physics
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Journal of Physical Chemistry A
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Proposed for publication in the Journal of Physical Chemistry A.
The rate coefficient for the self-reaction of vinyl radicals has been measured by two independent methods. The rate constant as a function of temperature at 20 Torr has been determined by a laser-photolysis/laser absorption technique. Vinyl iodide is photolyzed at 266 nm, and both the vinyl radical and the iodine atom photolysis products are monitored by laser absorption. The vinyl radical concentration is derived from the initial iodine atom concentration, which is determined by using the known absorption cross section of the iodine atomic transition to relate the observed absorption to concentration. The measured rate constant for the self-reaction at room temperature is approximately a factor of 2 lower than literature recommendations. The reaction displays a slightly negative temperature dependence, which can be represented by a negative activation energy, (E{sub a}/R) = -400 K. The laser absorption results are supported by independent experiments at 298 K and 4 Torr using time-resolved synchrotron-photoionization mass-spectrometric detection of the products of divinyl ketone and methyl vinyl ketone photolysis. The photoionization mass spectrometry experiments additionally show that methyl + propargyl are formed in the vinyl radical self-reaction, with an estimated branching fraction of 0.5 at 298 K and 4 Torr.
Journal of Physical Chemistry A
Abstract not provided.
Journal of Physical Chemistry A
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Journal of the American Chemical Society
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International Journal of Mass Spectrometry
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Journal of Physical Chemistry A
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Journal of Physical Chemistry A
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Chemical physics letters
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Physical Chemistry Chemical Physics
The photodissociation of vinyl iodide has been investigated at several wavelengths between 193 and 266 nm using three techniques: time-resolved Fourier transform emission spectroscopy, multiple pass laser absorption spectroscopy, and velocity-mapped ion imaging. The only dissociation channel observed is C-I bond cleavage to produce C2H3 (v, N) + I ( 2PJ) at all wavelengths investigated. Unlike photodissociation of other vinyl halides (C2H3X, X = F, Cl, Br), in which the HX product channel is significant, no HI elimination is observed. The angular and translational energy distributions of I atoms indicate that atomic products arise solely from dissociation on excited states with negligible contribution from internal conversion to the ground state. We derive an upper limit on the C-I bond strength of D0(C2H 3-I) ≤ 65 kcal mol-1. The ground-state potential-energy surface of vinyl iodide is explored by ab initio calculations. We present a model in which the highest occupied molecular orbital in vinyl halides has increasing X(np⊥) non-bonding character with increasing halogen mass. This change leads to reduced torsional force around the C-C bond in the excited state. Because the ground-state energy is highest when the CH 2 plane is perpendicular to the CHX plane, a reduced torsional force in the excited state correlates with a lower rate for internal conversion compared to excited-state C-X bond fission. This model explains the gradual change in photodissociation mechanisms of vinyl halides from the dominance of internal conversion in vinyl fluoride to the dominance of excited-state dissociation in vinyl iodide. © the Owner Societies.