Kinetics of CN reactions with N2O and CO2 |
| |
Authors: | N. S. Wang D. L. Yang M. C. Lin C. F. Melius |
| |
Affiliation: | Department of Chemistry, Emory University, Atlanta, Georgia 30322 |
| |
Abstract: | The rate constants for the reaction of CN with N2O and CO2 have been measured by the laser dissociation/laser-induced fluorescence (two-laser pump-probe) technique at temperatures between 300 and 740 K. The rate of CN + N2O was measurable above 500 K, with a least-squares averaged rate constant, k = 10−11.8±0.4 exp(−3560 ± 181/T) cm3/s. The rate of CN + CO2, however, was not measurable even at the highest temperature reached in the present work, 743 K, with [CO2] ⩽ 1.9 × 1018 molecules/cm3. In order to rationalize the observed kinetics, quantum mechanical calculations based on the BAC-MP4 method were performed. The results of these calculations reveal that the CN + N2O reaction takes place via a stable adduct NCNNO with a small barrier of 1.1 kcal/mol. The adduct, which is more stable than the reactants by 13 kcal/mol, decomposes into the NCN + NO products with an activation energy of 20.0 kcal/mol. This latter process is thus the rate-controlling step in the CN + N2O reaction. The CN + CO2 reaction, on the other hand, occurs with a large barrier of 27.4 kcal/mol, producing an unstable adduct NCOCO which fragments into NCO + CO with a small barrier of 4.5 kcal/mol. The large overall activation energy for this process explains the negligibly low reactivity of the CN radical toward CO2 below 1000 K. Least-squares analyses of the computed rate constants for these two CN reactions, which fit well with experimental data, give rise to for the temperature range 300–3000 K. |
| |
Keywords: | |
|
|