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1.
The potential energy surfaces (PES) for the reaction of the C(2)H radical with 1-butyne (C(4)H(6)) have been studied using the CBS-QB3 method. Density functional B3LYP/cc-pVTZ and M06-2X/6-311++G(d,p) calculations have also been performed to analyze the reaction energetics. For detailed theoretical calculation on the total reaction mechanism, the initial association reactions on more and less substituted C atoms of 1-butyne are treated separately followed by a variational transition state theory (VTST) calculation to obtain reaction rates. The successive unimolecular reactions from the association reaction complexes are subjected to Rice-Ramsperger-Kassel-Marcus (RRKM) calculations for reaction rate constants and product branching ratios. The calculated rate constants in the temperature range 70-295 K for both the association reactions are found to be highly temperature dependent at low temperatures, which is contrary to the experimental findings of temperature independent association rates. We have explained this observation with the help of variational nature of the transition states, and we found a "loose" transition state at low temperatures. The calculated product branching ratios for the unimolecular reactions generally agree with the available experimental data, although some channels show a significant method dependency and therefore the correlation with experiment is lost to some extent. Our detailed reaction energetics calculations confirm that the C(2)H + C(4)H(6) reaction proceeds without an entrance barrier and leads to the important products ethynylallene + CH(3), 1,3-hexadiyne + H, 3,4-hexadiene-1-yne + H, 2-ethynyl-1,3-butadiene + H, 3,4-dimethylenecyclobut-1-ene + H and fulvene + H exothermic by 25-75 kcal mol(-1), with strong dependence of the product distribution on the association mode of C(2)H with C(4)H(6), making these reactions fast under low temperature conditions of Titan's atmosphere. Therefore this study can provide a detailed picture of the complex hydrocarbon formation mechanism in the upper atmosphere.  相似文献   

2.
We have investigated the isomeric C6H6 product distributions of the self-reaction of propargyl (C3H3) radicals at two nominal pressures of 25 and 50 bar over the temperature range 720-1350 K. Experiments were performed using propargyl iodide as the radical precursor in a high-pressure single-pulse shock tube with a residence time of 1.6-2.0 ms. The relative yields of the C6H6 products are strongly temperature dependent, and the main products are 1,5-hexadiyne (15HD), 1,2-hexadiene-5-yne (12HD5Y), 3,4-dimethylenecyclobutene (34DMCB), 2-ethynyl-1,3-butadiene (2E13BD), fulvene, and benzene, with the minor products being cis- and trans-1,3-hexadiene-5-yne (13HD5Y). 1,2,4,5-Hexatetraene (1245HT) was observed below 750 K but the concentrations were too low to be quantified. The experimentally determined entry branching ratios are: 44% 15HD, 38% 12HD5Y, and 18% 1245HT, which is efficiently converted to 34DMCB. Following the initial recombination step, various C6H6 isomers are formed by thermal rearrangement. The experimentally observed concentrations for the C6H6 species are in good agreement with earlier experiments on 15HD thermal rearrangement.  相似文献   

3.
1,2,4,5-Hexatetraene (1245HT) is, according to theory, a key intermediate to benzene from propargyl radicals in a variety of flames; however, it has only been experimentally observed once in previous studies of the C3H3 + C3H3 reaction. To determine if it is indeed an intermediate to benzene formation, 1245HT was synthesized, via a Grignard reaction, and pyrolysized in a single-pulse shock tube at two nominal pressures of 22 and 40 bar over a temperature range from 540 to 1180 K. At temperatures T < 700 K, 1245HT converts efficiently to 3,4-dimethylenecyclobutene (34DMCB) with a rate constant of k = 10(10.16) x exp(-23.4 kcal/RT), which is in good agreement with the one calculated by Miller and Klippenstein. At higher temperatures, various C6H6 isomers were generated, which is consistent with theory and earlier experimental studies. Thus, the current work strongly supports the theory that 1245HT plays a bridging role in forming benzene from propargyl radicals. RRKM modeling of the current data set has also been carried out with the Miller-Klippenstein potential. It was found that the theory gives reasonably good predictions of the experimental observations of 1245HT, 1,5-hexadiyne (15HD), and 34DMCB in the current study and in our earlier studies of 15HD pyrolysis and propargyl recombination; however, there is considerable discrepancy between experiment and theory for the isomerization route of 1,2-hexadien-5-yne (12HD5Y) --> 2-ethynyl-1,3-butadiene (2E13BD) --> fulvene.  相似文献   

4.
The thermal decomposition of 1,3-butadiene, 1,3-butadiene-1,1,4,4-d(4), 1,2-butadiene, and 2-butyne at temperatures up to 1520 K was carried out by flash pyrolysis on a approximately 20 mus time scale. The reaction products were isolated by supersonic expansion and detected by single-photon (lambda = 118 nm) vacuum-ultraviolet time-of-flight mass spectrometry (VUV-TOFMS). Direct detection of CH(3) and C(3)H(3), as well as C(3)H(4), C(4)H(4), and C(4)H(5) products, provides insight into the initial steps involved in the complex pyrolysis of these C(4)H(6) species below T = 1500 K. The similar pyrolysis product distributions for the C(4)H(6) isomers on such a short time scale support the previously proposed mechanism of facile isomerization of these species. Isomerization of 1,3-butadiene to 1,2-butadiene and subsequent C-C bond fission of 1,2-butadiene to produce CH(3) and C(3)H(3) (propargyl) are most likely the primary initial radical production channel in the 1,3-butadiene pyrolysis.  相似文献   

5.
Ab initio G2M(MP2)//B3LYP/6-311G** calculations have been performed to investigate the reaction mechanism of photodissociation of buta-1,2- and -1,3-dienes and but-2-yne after their internal conversion into the vibrationally hot ground electronic state. The detailed study of the potential-energy surface was followed by microcanonical RRKM calculations of energy-dependent rate constants for individual reaction steps (at 193 nm photoexcitation and under collision-free conditions) and by solution of kinetic equations aimed at predicting the product branching ratios. For buta-1,2-diene, the major dissociation channels are found to be the single Cbond;C bond cleavage to form the methyl and propargyl radicals and loss of hydrogen atoms from various positions to produce the but-2-yn-1-yl (p1), buta-1,2-dien-4-yl (p2), and but-1-yn-3-yl (p3) isomers of C(4)H(5). The calculated branching ratio of the CH(3) + C(3)H(3)/C(4)H(5) + H products, 87.9:5.9, is in a good agreement with the recent experimental value of 96:4 (ref. 21) taking into account that a significant amount of the C(4)H(5) product undergoes secondary dissociation to C(4)H(4) + H. The isomerization of buta-1,2-diene to buta-1,3-diene or but-2-yne appears to be slower than its one-step decomposition and plays only a minor role. On the other hand, the buta-1,3-diene-->buta-1,2-diene, buta-1,3-diene-->but-2-yne, and buta-1,3-diene-->cyclobutene rearrangements are significant in the dissociation of buta-1,3-diene, which is shown to be a more complex process. The major reaction products are still CH(3) + C(3)H(3), formed after the isomerization of buta-1,3-diene to buta-1,2-diene, but the contribution of the other radical channels, C(4)H(5) + H and C(2)H(3) + C(2)H(3), as well as two molecular channels, C(2)H(2) + C(2)H(4) and C(4)H(4) + H(2), significantly increases. The overall calculated C(4)H(5) + H/CH(3) + C(3)H(3)/C(2)H(3) + C(2)H(3)/C(4)H(4) + H(2)/C(2)H(2) + C(2)H(4) branching ratio is 24.0:49.6:4.6:6.1:15.2, which agrees with the experimental value of 20:50:8:2:2022 within 5 % margins. For but-2-yne, the one-step decomposition pathways, which include mostly H atom loss to produce p1 and, to a minor extent, molecular hydrogen elimination to yield methylethynylcarbene, play an approximately even role with that of the channels that involve the isomerization of but-2-yne to buta-1,2- or -1,3-dienes. p1 + H are the most important reaction products, with a branching ratio of 56.6 %, followed by CH(3) + C(3)H(3) (23.8 %). The overall C(4)H(5) + H/CH(3) + C(3)H(3)/C(2)H(3) + C(2)H(3)/C(4)H(4) + H(2)/C(2)H(2) + C(2)H(4) branching ratio is predicted as 62.0:23.8:2.5:5.7:5.6. Contrary to buta-1,2- and -1,3-dienes, photodissociation of but-2-yne is expected to produce more hydrogen atoms than methyl radicals. The isomerization mechanisms between various isomers of the C(4)H(6) molecule including buta-1,2- and -1,3-dienes, but-2-yne, 1-methylcyclopropene, dimethylvinylidene, and cyclobutene have been also characterized in detail.  相似文献   

6.
A sample of 2-ethynyl-1,3-butadiene was synthesized by a thermal rearrangement of 1,2-hexadiene-5-yne at ca. 770 K. Infrared spectra were recorded of the vapour, the liquid and of the amorphous and crystalline solids at 90 K in the region 4000-50 cm−1. Raman spectra were obtained of the cooled liquid, including semiquantitative polarization measurements, and of the crystalline solid at 90 K. The spectral data indicate that 2-ethynyl-1,3-butadiene exists as the s-trans conformer in the various states of aggregation but the possibility of small amounts of a second conformer cannot be excluded.  相似文献   

7.
The work presented here is the first in a series of studies that use a molecular beam scattering technique to investigate the unimolecular reaction dynamics of C(4)H(7) radical isomers. Photodissociation of the halogenated precursor 2-bromo-1-butene at 193 nm under collisionless conditions produced 1-buten-2-yl radicals with a range of internal energies spanning the predicted barriers to the unimolecular reaction channels of the radical. Resolving the velocities of the stable C(4)H(7) radicals, as well as those of the products, allows for the identification of the energetic onset of each dissociation channel. The data show that radicals with at least 30.7 +/- 2 kcal/mol of internal energy underwent C-C fission to form allene + methyl, and radicals with at least 36.7 +/- 4 kcal/mol of internal energy underwent C-H fission to form H + 1-butyne and H + 1,2-butadiene; both of these observed barriers agree well with the G3//B3LYP calculations of Miller. HBr elimination from the parent molecule was observed, producing vibrationally excited 1-butyne and 1,2-butadiene. In the subsequent dissociation of these C(4)H(6) isomers, the major channel was C-C fission to form propargyl + methyl, and there is also evidence of at least one of the possible H + C(4)H(5) channels. A minor C-Br fission channel produces 1-buten-2-yl radicals in an excited electronic state and with low kinetic energy; these radicals exhibit markedly different dissociation dynamics than do the radicals produced in their ground electronic state.  相似文献   

8.
Pressure-dependent product yields have been experimentally determined for the cross-radical reaction C2H5 + C2H3. These results have been extended by calculations. It is shown that the chemically activated combination adduct, 1-C4H8*, is either stabilized by bimolecular collisions or subject to a variety of unimolecular reactions including cyclizations and decompositions. Therefore the "apparent" combination/disproportionation ratio exhibits a complex pressure dependence. The experimental studies were performed at 298 K and at selected pressures between about 4 Torr (0.5 kPa) and 760 Torr (101 kPa). Ethyl and vinyl radicals were simultaneously produced by 193 nm excimer laser photolysis of C2H5COC2H3 or photolysis of C2H3Br and C2H5COC2H5. Gas chromatograph/mass spectrometry/flame ionization detection (GC/MS/FID) were used to identify and quantify the final reaction products. The major combination reactions at pressures between 500 (66.5 kPa) and 760 Torr are (1c) C2H5+C2H3-->1-butene, (2c) C2H5 + C2H5-->n-butane, and (3c) C2H3+C2H3-->1,3-butadiene. The major products of the disproportionation reactions are ethane, ethylene, and acetylene. At moderate and lower pressures, secondary products, including propene, propane, isobutene, 2-butene (cis and trans), 1-pentene, 1,4-pentadiene, and 1,5-hexadiene are also observed. Two isomers of C4H6, cyclobutene and/or 1,2-butadiene, were also among the likely products. The pressure-dependent yield of the cross-combination product, 1-butene, was compared to the yield of n-butane, the combination product of reaction (2c), which was found to be independent of pressure over the range of this study. The [1-C4H8]/[C4H10] ratio was reduced from approximately 1.2 at 760 Torr (101 kPa) to approximately 0.5 at 100 Torr (13.3 kPa) and approximately 0.1 at pressures lower than about 5 Torr (approximately 0.7 kPa). Electronic structure and RRKM calculations were used to simulate both unimolecular and bimolecular processes. The relative importance of C-C and C-H bond ruptures, cyclization, decyclization, and complex decompositions are discussed in terms of energetics and structural properties. The pressure dependence of the product yields were computed and dominant reaction paths in this chemically activated system were determined. Both modeling and experiment suggest that the observed pressure dependence of [1-C4H8]/[C4H10] is due to decomposition of the chemically activated combination adduct 1-C4H8* in which the weaker allylic C-C bond is broken: H2C=CHCH2CH3-->C3H5+CH3. This reaction occurs even at moderate pressures of approximately 200 Torr (26 kPa) and becomes more significant at lower pressures. The additional products detected at lower pressures are formed from secondary radical-radical reactions involving allyl, methyl, ethyl, and vinyl radicals. The modeling studies have extended the predictions of product distributions to different temperatures (200-700 K) and a wider range of pressures (10(-3)-10(5) Torr). These calculations indicate that the high-pressure [1-C4H8]/[C4H10] yield ratio is 1.3+/-0.1.  相似文献   

9.
Using synchrotron-generated vacuum-ultraviolet radiation and multiplexed time-resolved photoionization mass spectrometry we have measured the absolute photoionization cross-section for the propargyl (C(3)H(3)) radical, σ(propargyl) (ion)(E), relative to the known absolute cross-section of the methyl (CH(3)) radical. We generated a stoichiometric 1:1 ratio of C(3)H(3):CH(3) from 193 nm photolysis of two different C(4)H(6) isomers (1-butyne and 1,3-butadiene). Photolysis of 1-butyne yielded values of σ(propargyl)(ion)(10.213 eV)=(26.1±4.2) Mb and σ(propargyl)(ion)(10.413 eV)=(23.4±3.2) Mb, whereas photolysis of 1,3-butadiene yielded values of σ(propargyl)(ion)(10.213 eV)=(23.6±3.6) Mb and σ(propargyl)(ion)(10.413 eV)=(25.1±3.5) Mb. These measurements place our relative photoionization cross-section spectrum for propargyl on an absolute scale between 8.6 and 10.5 eV. The cross-section derived from our results is approximately a factor of three larger than previous determinations.  相似文献   

10.
A detailed study of the photochemical and discharge-driven pathways taken by gas-phase 1,3-butadiene has been carried out. Photolysis or discharge excitation was initiated inside a short reaction tube attached to the outlet of a pulsed valve. Bath gas temperatures near 100 K were achieved in the reaction tube by the constrained expansion of the gas mixture into the tube, simulating temperatures of relevance in Titan's atmosphere. Photolysis of 1,3-butadiene was initiated at 218 nm with a laser pulse that counter-propagated the reaction tube. Discharge excitation was carried out using discharge electrodes imbedded in the reaction tube walls, enabling the study of the photochemical and discharge products under similar conditions. Products were detected using either single-photon VUV photoionization (118 nm = 10.5 eV) or resonant two-photon ionization (R(2)PI) spectroscopy in a time-of-flight mass spectrometer. Emphasis was placed on characterization of the aromatic products formed, since these may be of particular relevance to Titan's atmosphere, where benzene has been positively identified and 1,3-butadiene is projected as the principle pathway to its formation. Consistent with previous studies of the photodissociation of 1,3-butadiene, C(3)H(3) + CH(3) is the dominant primary product formed. Under the temperature-pressure conditions present in the reaction tube (T approximately 75-100 K, P = 50 mbar), C(6)H(6) is the dominant secondary photochemical product formed. A 1:1 C(4)H(6):C(4)D(6) mixture was used to prove that the C(6)H(6) product was formed by recombination of two C(3)H(3) radicals; however, a careful search for benzene revealed none, indicating that less than 1% of the C(6)H(6) formed in the reaction tube is benzene. This is consistent with expectations for these temperatures and pressures based on previous modeling of propargyl recombination. Two aromatic products were observed from the photochemistry: ethylbenzene and 3-phenylpropyne. Plausible pathways leading to these products are proposed. In the discharge, C(3)H(3) + CH(3) are also identified as significant primary neutral products and C(6)H(6) as a dominant higher-mass product. In this case, the C(6)H(6) was identified as benzene via its R2PI spectrum, appearing with intensity about 10 times larger than any other aromatic formed in the discharge. R2PI spectra of a total of about 15 aromatic products were recorded from the 1,3-butadiene discharge, among them toluene; styrene; phenylacetylene; o-, m-, and p-xylene; ethylbenzene; indane; indene; beta-methylstyrene; and naphthalene. Previously unidentified spectra in the m/z 142 and 144 mass channels were positively identified as the 1,3- and 1,4-isomers of phenylcyclopentadiene and the analogous 1-phenylcyclopentene.  相似文献   

11.
The self-reaction of propargyl (C3H3) radicals has been widely suggested as one of the key routes forming benzene in a variety of aliphatic flames. Currently, in the majority of aromatic models, the C3H3 + C3H3 submechanism often contains one or two C6H6 isomers and a few global reaction steps, which do not adequately represent the actual recombination chemistry. Recent experimental and theoretical studies on the direct propargyl recombination and subsequent C6H6 isomerization have provided sufficient information to revisit and revise the C3H3 + C3H3 reaction submechanism. In the present work, a semidetailed kinetic model consisting of seven isomeric C6H6 species and 14 reaction steps was constructed based on the most recent potential energy surface for this system. The trial model was subjected to systemic optimization by use of a recently developed physically bounded Gauss-Newton (PGN) method against detailed species profiles of direct propargyl recombination and 1,5-hexadiyne (15HD) isomerization obtained from experiments at high temperatures in a shock tube and at low temperatures in a flow reactor, which were all measured at very high pressure (shock tube) or atmospheric (flow reactor) conditions. Predictions of the optimized model were in excellent agreement with all experimental measurements. The optimized C3H3 + C3H3 reaction subset was also tested for flame modeling. Two different aromatic chemistry models that incorporate benzene formation from propargyl radicals as a single step reaction were modified to include the complete submechanism for propargyl recombination. The updated models predict significant percentages of three isomeric species [2-ethynyl-1,3-butadiene (2E13BD), fulvene, and benzene] in premixed fuel-rich acetylene and ethylene flames, reflecting the observed flame structures.  相似文献   

12.
The reactions of BH2+ with propylene (CH2=CHCH3) to form both the adducts BC3H8+ and the H2-elimination products BC3H6+ + H2 have been investigated at the density functional B3LYP/6-311G(d,p) level of theory. It is shown that the electrophilic attacks of BH2+ towards two olefinic carbons of H2C=CHCH3 and two subsequent 1,3-H-shifts may form four low-lying BC3H8+ isomers (with the relative energies in parentheses in kcal/mol): 1 BH2+.CH2CHCH3 (0.0), 1' BH2+.CH3CHCH2 (6.3), 3 BHCH2CH2CH3+ (4.3), and 4 BHCH(CH3)2+ (5.0), respectively. On the other hand, further H2-eliminations may also occur easily between B-C bonds of isomers 1 and 1' and between C-C bonds of isomers 3 and 4 to form two dissociation products (P1) HBCHCHCH3+ + H2 and (P2) HBC(CH3)CH2+ + H2, with H2-elimination from isomer 1 to be energetically most favorable. According to our calculated mechanism, the collisional stabilization processes of low-lying isomers 1, 1', 3, and 4 may compete extensively with their H2-eliminations processes for the title reaction, leading mainly to some linear carborane cations. This study may be helpful for understanding the stereochemical aspects of borohydride cations towards alkylenes.  相似文献   

13.
The crossed beam reactions of the phenyl radical (C(6)H(5), X(2)A(1)) with 1,3-butadiene (C(4)H(6), X(1)A(g)) and D6-1,3-butadiene (C(4)D(6), X(1)A(g)) as well as of the D5-phenyl radical (C(6)D(5), X(2)A(1)) with 2,3-D2-1,3-butadiene and 1,1,4,4-D4-1,3-butadiene were carried out under single collision conditions at collision energies of about 55 kJ mol(-1). Experimentally, the bicyclic 1,4-dihydronaphthalene molecule was identified as a major product of this reaction (58 ± 15%) with the 1-phenyl-1,3-butadiene contributing 34 ± 10%. The reaction is initiated by a barrierless addition of the phenyl radical to the terminal carbon atom of the 1,3-butadiene (C1/C4) to form a bound intermediate; the latter underwent hydrogen elimination from the terminal CH(2) group of the 1,3-butadiene molecule leading to 1-phenyl-trans-1,3-butadiene through a submerged barrier. The dominant product, 1,4-dihydronaphthalene, is formed via an isomerization of the adduct by ring closure and emission of the hydrogen atom from the phenyl moiety at the bridging carbon atom through a tight exit transition state located about 31 kJ mol(-1) above the separated products. The hydrogen atom was found to leave the decomposing complex almost parallel to the total angular momentum vector and perpendicularly to the rotation plane of the decomposing intermediate. The defacto barrierless formation of the 1,4-dihydronaphthalene molecule involving a single collision between a phenyl radical and 1,3-butadiene represents an important step in the formation of polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs) and their partially hydrogenated counterparts in combustion and interstellar chemistry.  相似文献   

14.
The reaction of 1,3-cyclopentadiene (CPD) with ground-state atomic oxygen O(3P), produced by mercury photosensitized decomposition of nitrous oxide, was studied. The identified products were carbon monoxide and the following C4H6 isomers: 3-methylcyclopropene, 1,3-butadiene, 1,2-butadiene, and 1-butyne. The yield of carbon monoxide over oxygen atoms produced (?CO) was equal to the sum of the yields of C4H6 isomers in any experiment. ?CO was 0.43 at the total pressure of 6.5 torr and 0.20 at 500 torr. We did not succeed in detecting any addition products such as C5H6O isomers. It was found that 3-methylcyclopropene was produced with excess energy and was partly isomerized to other C4H6 isomers, especially to 1-butyne. The excess energy was estimated to be about 50 kcal/mol. The rate coefficient of the reaction was obtained relative to those for the reactions of atomic oxygen with trans-2-butene and 1-butene. The ratios kCPD+O/ktrans-2-butene+O= 2.34 and kCPD+O/k1-butene+O = 11.3 were obtained. Probable reaction mechanisms and intermediates are suggested.  相似文献   

15.
The 193-nm photochemistry of allene (H2C=C=CH2), propyne (H3C-C[triple bond]CH), and 2-butyne (H3C-C[triple bond]C-CH3) has been examined, and the UV spectral region between 220 and 350 nm has been surveyed for UV-absorption detection of transient species generated from the photolysis of these molecules. Time-resolved UV-absorption spectroscopy was used for detection of transient absorption. Gas chromatographic/mass spectroscopic (GC/MS) analysis of the photolyzed samples were employed for identification of the final photodissociation products. An emphasis of the study has been on the examination of possibilities of formation of different C3H3 isomeric radicals, that is, propargyl (H2CCCH) or propynyl (H3CCC), from the 193-nm photolysis of these molecules. Survey of the UV spectral region, following the 193-nm photolysis of dilute mixtures of allene/He resulted in detection of a strong absorption band around 230 nm and a weaker band in the 320-nm region with a relative intensity of about 8:1. The time-resolved absorption traces after the photolysis event show an instantaneous rise, followed by a simple decay. The spectral features, observed in this work, following 193-nm photolysis of allene are in good agreement with the previously reported spectrum of H2CCCH radical in the 240- and 320-nm regions and are believed to originate primarily from propargyl radicals. In comparison, the spectra obtained from the 193-nm photolysis of dilute mixtures of HCCCH3/He and CH3CCCH3/He were nearly identical, consisting of two relatively broad bands centered at about 240- and 320-nm regions with a relative intensity of about 2:1, respectively. In addition, the time-resolved absorption traces after photolysis of propyne and 2-butyne samples, both in the 240 and 320 nm regions, indicated an instant rise followed by an additional slower absorption rise. The distinct differences between the results of allene with those of propyne and 2-butyne suggest the observed absorption features following 193-nm photolysis of these molecules are likely to be composite with contributions from a number of transient species other than propargyl radicals. Propyne and 2-butyne are structurally similar. The methyl (CH3) and propynyl (CH3C[triple bond]C) radicals are likely to be among the photodissociation products of 2-butyne, and similarly, propynyl is likely to be a photodissociation product of propyne. GC/MS product analysis of photolyzed 2-butyne/He mixtures indicates the formation of C2H6 (formed from the combination of CH3 radicals), and a number of C6H6 and C4H6 isomers formed from self- and cross reactions of C3H3 and CH3 radicals, including 1,5-hexadiyne and 2,4-hexadyine, that are potential products of combination reactions of propargyl as well as propynyl radicals.  相似文献   

16.
1,2-Butadiene diluted with Ar was heated behind reflected shock waves over the temperature and the total density range of 1100–1600 K and 1.36 × 10?5 ? 1.75 × 10?5 mol/cm3. The major products were 1,3-butadiene, 1-butyne, 2-butyne, vinylacetylene, diacetylene, allene, propyne, C2H6, C2H4, CH4, and benzene, which were analyzed by gas chromatography. The UV kinetic absorption spectroscopy at 230 nm showed that 1,2-butadiene rapidly isomerizes to 1,3-butadiene from the initial stage of the reaction above 1200 K. In order to interpret the formation of 1,3-butadiene, 1-butyne, and 2-butyne, it was necessary to include the parallel isomerizations of 1,2-butadiene to these isomers. The present data were successfuly modeled with a 82 reaction mechanism. From the modeling, rate constant expressions were derived for the isomerization 1,2-butadiene = 1,3-butadiene to be k3 = 2.5 × 1013 exp(?63 kcal/RT) s?1 and for the decomposition 1,2-butadiene = C3H3 + CH3 to be k6 = 2.0 × 1015 exp(?75 kcal/RT) s?1, where the activation energies, 63 kcal/mol and 75 kcal/mol, were assumed. These rate constants are only applicable under the present experimental conditions, 1100–1600 K and 1.23–2.30 atm. © 1995 John Wiley & Sons, Inc.  相似文献   

17.
This work investigates the unimolecular dissociation of the 2-buten-2-yl radical. This radical has three potentially competing reaction pathways: C-C fission to form CH3 + propyne, C-H fission to form H + 1,2-butadiene, and C-H fission to produce H + 2-butyne. The experiments were designed to probe the branching to the three unimolecular dissociation pathways of the radical and to test theoretical predictions of the relevant dissociation barriers. Our crossed laser-molecular beam studies show that 193 nm photolysis of 2-chloro-2-butene produces 2-buten-2-yl in the initial photolytic step. A minor C-Cl bond fission channel forms electronically excited 2-buten-2-yl radicals and the dominant C-Cl bond fission channel produces ground-state 2-buten-2-yl radicals with a range of internal energies that spans the barriers to dissociation of the radical. Detection of the stable 2-buten-2-yl radicals allows a determination of the translational, and therefore internal, energy that marks the onset of dissociation of the radical. The experimental determination of the lowest-energy dissociation barrier gave 31 +/- 2 kcal/mol, in agreement with the 32.8 +/- 2 kcal/mol barrier to C-C fission at the G3//B3LYP level of theory. Our experiments detected products of all three dissociation channels of unstable 2-buten-2-yl as well as a competing HCl elimination channel in the photolysis of 2-chloro-2-butene. The results allow us to benchmark electronic structure calculations on the unimolecular dissociation reactions of the 2-buten-2-yl radical as well as the CH3 + propyne and H + 1,2-butadiene bimolecular reactions. They also allow us to critique prior experimental work on the H + 1,2-butadiene reaction.  相似文献   

18.
The fragmentation process of ionized 1,4-dioxane and the reactions between the C3H6O+* ions, one of the major fragments, and various reactants (including acetonitrile, formaldehyde, ethylene, and propene) have been studied experimentally with mass spectrometry. In the present work, G3(MP2) calculations were carried out to investigate these processes theoretically. In agreement with experiment, isomers CH3OCHCH2+* (1) and *CH2CH2OCH2+ (2) were found to be the C3H6O+* ions fragmented from ionized 1,4-dioxane, with 2 being the major product. The mechanisms of the formation of 1 and 2 were successfully established. In addition, the characteristic reactivities, as well as the corresponding reaction mechanisms, of both isomers were rationalized with the aid of calculations. Finally, a minor reaction between isomer 2 and propene was identified, and the presence of the product of this reaction was found to be useful in explaining the aforementioned mass spectrometric data.  相似文献   

19.
The reduction of Ar*GeCl (Ar* = C6H3-2,6-Trip2; Trip = C6H2-2,4,6-i-Pr3) with one equivalent of potassium leads to the formation of a germanium analogue of an alkyne Ar*GeGeAr* 1; reaction of 1 with 2,3-dimethyl-1,3-butadiene yields [Ar*Ge(CH2C(Me)C(Me)CH2)CH2C(Me)=]2 2, which was structurally characterized.  相似文献   

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