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1.
The pyrolyses of the guaiacols or methoxyphenols (o-, m-, and p-HOC(6)H(4)OCH(3)) have been studied using a heated SiC microtubular (μ-tubular) reactor. The decomposition products are detected by both photoionization time-of-flight mass spectroscopy (PIMS) and matrix isolation infrared spectroscopy (IR). Gas exiting the heated SiC μ-tubular reactor is subject to a free expansion after a residence time of approximately 50-100 μs. The PIMS reveals that, for all three guaiacols, the initial decomposition step is loss of methyl radical: HOC(6)H(4)OCH(3) → HOC(6)H(4)O + CH(3). Decarbonylation of the HOC(6)H(4)O radical produces the hydroxycyclopentadienyl radical, C(5)H(4)OH. As the temperature of the μ-tubular reactor is raised to 1275 K, the C(5)H(4)OH radical loses a H atom to produce cyclopentadienone, C(5)H(4)═O. Loss of CO from cyclopentadienone leads to the final products, acetylene and vinylacetylene: C(5)H(4)═O → [CO + 2 HC≡CH] or [CO + HC≡C-CH═CH(2)]. The formation of C(5)H(4)═O, HCCH, and CH(2)CHCCH is confirmed with IR spectroscopy. In separate studies of the (1 + 1) resonance-enhanced multiphoton ionization (REMPI) spectra, we observe the presence of C(6)H(5)OH in the molecular beam: C(6)H(5)OH + λ(275.1?nm) → [C(6)H(5)OH ?] + λ(275.1nm) → C(6)H(5)OH(+). From the REMPI and PIMS signals and previous work on methoxybenzene, we suggest that phenol results from a radical/radical reaction: CH(3) + C(5)H(4)OH → [CH(3)-C(5)H(4)OH]* → C(6)H(5)OH + 2H.  相似文献   

2.
Chemically accurate ab initio Gaussian-3-type calculations of the C(10)H(9) potential energy surface (PES) for rearrangements of the 9-H-fulvalenyl radical C(5)H(5)-C(5)H(4) have been performed to investigate the formation mechanisms of polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs) originated from the recombination of two cyclopentadienyl radicals (c-C(5)H(5)) as well as from the intermolecular addition of cyclopentadienyl to cyclopentadiene (c-C(5)H(6)) under combustion and pyrolytic conditions. Statistical theory calculations have been applied to obtain high-pressure-limit thermal rate constants, followed by solving kinetic equations to evaluate relative product yields. At the high-pressure limit, naphthalene, fulvalene, and azulene have been shown as the reaction products in rearrangements of the 9-H-fulvalenyl radical, with relative yields depending on temperature. At low temperatures (T < 1000 K), naphthalene is predicted to be the major product (>50%), whereas at higher temperatures the naphthalene yield rapidly decreases and the formation of fulvalene becomes dominant. At T > 1500 K, naphthalene and azulene are only minor products accounting for less than 10% of the total yield. The reactions involving cyclopentadienyl radicals and cyclopentadiene have thus been shown to give only a small contribution to the naphthalene production on the C(10)H(9) PES at medium and high combustion temperatures. The high yields of fulvalene at these conditions indicate that cyclopentadienyl radical and cyclopentadiene more likely represent significant sources of cyclopentafused PAHs, which are possible fullerene precursors. Our results agree well with a low-temperature cyclopentadiene pyrolysis data, where naphthalene has been identified as the major reaction product together with indene. Azulene has been found to be only a minor product in 9-H-fulvalenyl radical rearrangements, with branching ratios of less than 5% at all studied temperatures. The production of naphthalene at low combustion temperatures (T < 1000 K) is governed by the spiran mechanism originally suggested by Melius et al. At higher temperatures, the alternative C-C bond scission route, which proceeds via the formation of the cis-4-phenylbutadienyl radical, is competitive with the spiran pathway. The contributions of the previously suggested methylene walk pathway to the production of naphthalene have been calculated to be negligible at all studied temperatures.  相似文献   

3.
Phenol pyrolysis has been studied in a turbulent flow reactor by analyzing concentration-time profiles of three major decomposition products: carbon monoxide, cyclopentadiene, and benzene. Experimental conditions were P = 1 atm, T = 1064 ? 1162 K, and initial phenol concentrations of 500?2016 ppm. The major experimental observations were that the decomposition product profiles were nearly linear as a function of time and that the overall rate of carbon monoxide production was greater than that of cyclopentadiene. The rate difference is explained by a mechanism which includes a radical combination reaction of cyclopentadienyl and phenoxy. With literature and approximate rate coefficient data, the mechanism reproduced the experimental observations very well. The mechanism and data provide estimates of rate coefficients for the phenol decomposition initiation step, abstraction of hydrogen from phenol by cyclopentadienyl, and the phenoxy-cyclopentadienyl combination, all of which have not been available in the literature.  相似文献   

4.
The pyrolysis of 2-phenethyl phenyl ether (PPE, C(6)H(5)C(2)H(4)OC(6)H(5)) in a hyperthermal nozzle (300-1350 °C) was studied to determine the importance of concerted and homolytic unimolecular decomposition pathways. Short residence times (<100 μs) and low concentrations in this reactor allowed the direct detection of the initial reaction products from thermolysis. Reactants, radicals, and most products were detected with photoionization (10.5 eV) time-of-flight mass spectrometry (PIMS). Detection of phenoxy radical, cyclopentadienyl radical, benzyl radical, and benzene suggest the formation of product by the homolytic scission of the C(6)H(5)C(2)H(4)-OC(6)H(5) and C(6)H(5)CH(2)-CH(2)OC(6)H(5) bonds. The detection of phenol and styrene suggests decomposition by a concerted reaction mechanism. Phenyl ethyl ether (PEE, C(6)H(5)OC(2)H(5)) pyrolysis was also studied using PIMS and using cryogenic matrix-isolated infrared spectroscopy (matrix-IR). The results for PEE also indicate the presence of both homolytic bond breaking and concerted decomposition reactions. Quantum mechanical calculations using CBS-QB3 were conducted, and the results were used with transition state theory (TST) to estimate the rate constants for the different reaction pathways. The results are consistent with the experimental measurements and suggest that the concerted retro-ene and Maccoll reactions are dominant at low temperatures (below 1000 °C), whereas the contribution of the C(6)H(5)C(2)H(4)-OC(6)H(5) homolytic bond scission reaction increases at higher temperatures (above 1000 °C).  相似文献   

5.
Ab initio G2M calculations have been performed to investigate the potential energy surface for the reaction of C6H5 with O2. The reaction is shown to start with an exothermic barrierless addition of O2 to the radical site of C6H5 to produce phenylperoxy (1) and, possibly, 1,2-dioxaspiro[2.5]octadienyl (dioxiranyl, 8) radicals. Next, 1 loses the terminal oxygen atom to yield the phenoxy + O products (3) or rearranges to 8. The dioxiranyl can further isomerize to a seven-member ring 2-oxepinyloxy radical (10), which can give rise to various products including C5H5 + CO2, pyranyl + CO, o-benzoquinone + H, and 2-oxo-2,3-dihydrofuran-4-yl + C2H2. Once 10 is produced, it is unlikely to go back to 8 and 1, because the barriers separating 10 from the products are much lower than the reverse barrier from 10 to 8. Thus, the branching ratio of C6H5O + O against the other products is mostly controlled by the critical transition states between 1 and 3, 1 and 8, and 8 and 10. According to the calculated barriers, the most favorable product channel for the decomposition of 10 is C5H5 + CO2, followed by pyranyl + CO and o-benzoquinone + H. Since C6H5O + O and C5H5 + CO2 are expected to be the major primary products of the C6H5 + O2 reaction and thermal decomposition of C6H5O leads to C5H5 + CO, cyclopentadienyl radicals are likely to be the major product of phenyl radical oxidation, and so it results in degradation of the six-member aromatic ring to the five-member cyclopentadienyl ring. Future multichannel RRKM calculations of reaction rate constants are required to support these conclusions and to quantify the product branching ratios at various combustion conditions.  相似文献   

6.
The formation and the decomposition of chemically activated cyclopentoxy radicals from the c-C5H9 + O reaction have been studied in the gas phase at room temperature. Two different experimental arrangements have been used. Arrangement A consisted of a laser-flash photolysis set up combined with quantitative Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy and allowed the determination of the stable products at 4 mbar. The c-C5H9 radicals were produced via the reaction c-C5H10 + Cl with chlorine atoms from the photolysis of CFCl3; the O atoms were generated by photolysis of SO2. Arrangement B, a conventional discharge flow-reactor with molecular beam sampling, was used to determine the rate coefficient. Here, the hydrocarbon radicals (c-C5H9, C2H5, CH2OCH3) were produced via the reaction of atomic fluorine with c-C5H10, C2H6, and CH3OCH3, respectively, and detected by mass spectrometry after laser photoionization. For the c-C5H9 + O reaction, the relative contributions of intermediate formation (c-C5H9O) and direct abstraction (c-C5H8 + OH) were found to be 68 +/- 5 and 32 +/- 4%, respectively. The decomposition products of the chemically activated intermediate could be identified, and the following relative branching fractions were obtained: c-C5H8O + H (31 +/- 2%), CH2CH(CH2)2CHO + H (40 +/- 5%), 2 C2H4 + H + CO (17 +/- 5%), and C3H4O + C2H4 + H (12 +/- 5%). Additionally, the product formation of the c-C5H8 + O reaction was studied, and the following relative yields were obtained (mol %): C2H4, 24%; C3H4O, 18%; c-C5H8O, 30%; c-C5H8O, 23%; 4-pentenal, 5%. The rate coefficient of the c-C5H9 + O reaction was determined relative to the reactions C2H5 + O and CH3OCH2 + O leading to k = (1.73 +/- 0.05) x 10(14) cm3 mol(-1) s(-1). The experimental branching fractions are analyzed in terms of statistical rate theory with molecular and transition-state data from quantum chemical calculations, and high-pressure limiting Arrhenius parameters for the unimolecular decomposition reactions of C5H9O species are derived.  相似文献   

7.
The formation of radicals from the gas-phase pyrolysis of phenol over a temperature range of 400-1000 degrees C was studied using the technique of low temperature matrix isolation electron paramagnetic resonance (LTMI EPR). Cooling the reactor effluent in a CO2 carrier gas to 77 K produces a cryogenic matrix that exhibits complex EPR spectra. However, annealing by slowly raising the matrix temperature yielded well-resolved, identifiable spectra. All annealed spectra over the temperature range of 700-1000 degrees C resulted in the generation of EPR spectra with six lines, hyperfine splitting constant approximately 6.0 G, g = 2.00430, and peak-to-peak width approximately 3 G that was readily assignable, based on comparison with the literature and theoretical calculations, as that of cyclopentadienyl radical. Annihilation procedures along with microwave power saturation experiments helped to clearly identify phenoxy radicals in the same temperature region. Conclusive identifications of cyclopentadienyl and phenoxy radicals were based on pure spectra of these radicals under the same experimental conditions generated from suitable precursors. Cyclopentadienyl is clearly the dominant radical at temperatures above 700 degrees C and is observed at temperatures as low as 400 degrees C. The low-temperature formation is attributed to heterogeneous initiation of phenol decomposition under very low pressure conditions. The high cyclopentadienyl to phenoxy ratio was consistent with the results of reaction kinetic modeling calculations using the CHEMKIN kinetic package and a phenol pyrolysis model adapted from the literature.  相似文献   

8.
The thermal decomposition of the 5-methyl-2-furanylmethyl radical (R(1)), the most important primary radical formed during the combustion and thermal decomposition of 2,5-dimethylfuran (a promising next-generation biofuel), was studied using CBS-QB3 calculations and master equation (ME)/RRKM modeling. Because very little information is available in the literature, the detailed potential energy surface (PES) was investigated thoroughly. Only the main pathways, having a kinetic influence on the decomposition of R(1), were retained in the final ME/RRKM model. Among all the channels studied, the ring-opening of the 5-methyl-2-furanylmethyl radical, followed by ring enlargement to form cyclohexadienone molecules is predicted to be the easiest decomposition channel of R(1). The C(6) cyclic species formed can undergo unimolecular reactions to yield phenol and to a lesser extent cyclopentadiene and CO. Our calculations predict that these species are important products formed during the pyrolysis of 2,5-dimethylfuran (DMF). Other channels involved in the decomposition of R(1) lead directly to the formation of linear and cyclic unsaturated C(5) species and constitute an additional source of cyclopentadiene and CO. High-pressure limit rate constants were computed as well as thermochemical properties for important species. ME/RRKM analysis was performed to probe the influence of pressure on the rate coefficients and pressure dependent rate coefficients were proposed for pressures and temperatures ranging, respectively, from 10(-2) bar to 10 bar and 1000 to 2000 K.  相似文献   

9.
We have used a heated 2 cm × 1 mm SiC microtubular (μtubular) reactor to decompose acetaldehyde: CH(3)CHO + Δ → products. Thermal decomposition is followed at pressures of 75-150 Torr and at temperatures up to 1675 K, conditions that correspond to residence times of roughly 50-100 μs in the μtubular reactor. The acetaldehyde decomposition products are identified by two independent techniques: vacuum ultraviolet photoionization mass spectroscopy (PIMS) and infrared (IR) absorption spectroscopy after isolation in a cryogenic matrix. Besides CH(3)CHO, we have studied three isotopologues, CH(3)CDO, CD(3)CHO, and CD(3)CDO. We have identified the thermal decomposition products CH(3) (PIMS), CO (IR, PIMS), H (PIMS), H(2) (PIMS), CH(2)CO (IR, PIMS), CH(2)=CHOH (IR, PIMS), H(2)O (IR, PIMS), and HC≡CH (IR, PIMS). Plausible evidence has been found to support the idea that there are at least three different thermal decomposition pathways for CH(3)CHO; namely, radical decomposition: CH(3)CHO + Δ → CH(3) + [HCO] → CH(3) + H + CO; elimination: CH(3)CHO + Δ → H(2) + CH(2)=C=O; isomerization∕elimination: CH(3)CHO + Δ → [CH(2)=CH-OH] → HC≡CH + H(2)O. An interesting result is that both PIMS and IR spectroscopy show compelling evidence for the participation of vinylidene, CH(2)=C:, as an intermediate in the decomposition of vinyl alcohol: CH(2)=CH-OH + Δ → [CH(2)=C:] + H(2)O → HC≡CH + H(2)O.  相似文献   

10.
Reaction of Re(CO)5O3SCF3 with (c-C6H11)7Si8O12O-Li+ at 273 K under a CO atmosphere affords the [Re(CO)5OR] (R = (c-C6H11)7Si8O12) derivative (1). 1 is the first example of a rhenium pentacarbonyl bearing an OR ligand (R = alkyl, aryl, or silyl) stable enough to be characterized, and it represents also the first molecular model of the surface [Re(CO)5OSi] species formed by reductive carbonylation of silica-supported [Re(CO)3OH]4. At room temperature, 1 loses one carbonyl ligand and dimerizes to afford {Re(CO)4[(mu-O)O12Si8(c-C6H11)7]}2 (2), which has been characterized by X-ray diffraction and is the first reported example of a rhenium tetracarbonyl mu-oxo-bridged dimer of the type [Re(CO)4(mu-OR)]2.  相似文献   

11.
Ab initio CCSD(T)/CBS//B3LYP/6-311G** calculations of the potential energy surface for possible dissociation channels of the phenyl radical are combined with microcanonical Rice-Ramsperger-Kassel-Marcus calculations of reaction rate constants in order to predict statistical product branching ratios in photodissociation of c-C(6)H(5) at various wavelengths. The results indicate that at 248 nm the photodissociation process is dominated by the production of ortho-benzyne via direct elimination of a hydrogen atom from the phenyl radical. At 193 nm, the statistical branching ratios are computed to be 63.4%, 21.1%, and 14.4% for the o-C(6)H(4) + H, l-C(6)H(4) ((Z)-hexa-3-ene-1,5-diyne) + H, and n-C(4)H(3) + C(2)H(2) products, respectively, in a contradiction with recent experimental measurements, which showed C(4)H(3) + C(2)H(2) as the major product. Although two lower energy pathways to the i-C(4)H(3) + C(2)H(2) products are identified, they appeared to be kinetically unfavorable and the computed statistical branching ratio of i-C(4)H(3) + C(2)H(2) does not exceed 1%. To explain the disagreement with experiment, we optimized conical intersections between the ground and the first excited electronic states of C(6)H(5) and, based on their structures and energies, suggested the following photodissociation mechanism at 193 nm: c-C(6)H(5) 1 → absorption of a photon → electronically excited 1 → internal conversion to the lowest excited state → conversion to the ground electronic state via conical intersections at CI-2 or CI-3 → non-statistical decay of the vibrationally excited radical favoring the formation of the n-C(4)H(3) + C(2)H(2) products. This scenario can be attained if the intramolecular vibrational redistribution in the CI-2 or CI-3 structures in the ground electronic state is slower than their dissociation to n-C(4)H(3) + C(2)H(2) driven by the dynamical preference.  相似文献   

12.
The lowest-lying triplet and singlet potential energy surfaces for the O(3P) + C6H6 reaction were theoretically characterized using the "complete basis set" CBS-QB3 model chemistry. The primary product distributions for the multistate multiwell reactions on the individual surfaces were then determined by RRKM statistical rate theory and weak-collision master equation analysis using the exact stochastic simulation method. It is newly found that electrophilic O-addition onto a carbon atom in benzene can occur in parallel on two triplet surfaces, 3A' and 3A' '; the results predict O-addition to be dominant up to combustion temperatures. Major expected end-products of the addition routes include phenoxy radical + H*, phenol and/or benzene oxide/oxepin, in agreement with the experimental evidence. While c-C6H5O* + H* are nearly exclusively formed via a spin-conservation mechanism on the lowest-lying triplet surface, phenol and/or benzene oxide/oxepin are mainly generated from the lowest-lying singlet surface after inter-system crossing from the initial triplet surface. CO + c-C5H6 are predicted to be minor products in flame conditions, with a yield < or = 5%. The O + C6H6 --> c-C5H5* + *CHO channel is found to be unimportant under all relevant combustion conditions, in contrast with previous theoretical conclusions (J. Phys. Chem. A 2001, 105, 4316). Efficient H-abstraction pathways are newly identified, occurring on two different electronic state surfaces, 3B1 and 3B2, resulting in hydroxyl plus phenyl radicals; they are predicted to play an important role at higher temperatures in hydrocarbon combustion, with estimated contributions of ca. 50% at 2000 K. The overall thermal rate coefficient k(O + C6H6) at 300-800 K was computed using multistate transition state theory: k(T) = 3.7 x 10-16 x T 1.66 x exp(-1830 K/T) cm(3) molecule(-1) s(-1), in good agreement with the experimental data available.  相似文献   

13.
Chemically accurate ab initio Gaussian-3-type calculations of various rearrangements on the C10H11 potential energy surface have been performed to investigate the indene formation mechanism originating from the reactions of two abundant cyclic C5 species, cyclopentadiene and cyclopentadienyl radicals. Using the accurate ab initio data, statistical theory calculations have been applied to obtain high-pressure-limit thermal rate constants within the 300-3000 K temperature range, followed by calculations of relative product yields. Totally, 12 reaction pathways leading to indene and several azulene precursors, 1,5-, 1,7-, 1,8a-, and 1,3a-dihydroazulene, have been mapped out, and the relative contributions of each pathway to the formation of reaction products have been estimated. At temperatures relevant to combustion, the indene has been found as the major reaction product (>50%) followed by 1,5-dihydroazulene (25-35%), whereas all other products demonstrate either minor or negligible yields. The results of the present study have been combined with our previous data for rearrangements of the 9-H-fulvalenyl radical on the C10H9 potential energy surface to draw the detailed picture of radical-promoted reaction mechanisms leading from c-C5 species to the production of indene, naphthalene, azulene, and fulvalene in combustion. The suggested mechanism and computed product yields are consistent with the experimental data obtained in the low-temperature pyrolysis of cyclopentadiene, where indene and naphthalene have been found as the major reaction products.  相似文献   

14.
Aqueous sulfuric acid containing up to approximately 14 M acid (H0 > or = -7.0) was used as solvent in pulse radiolytic redox studies to characterize cationic transients of phenol (C6H5OH) and map their reactions. The primary radical yields were first measured to correlate the variation in various radical concentrations as a function of increasing acid fraction in the solvent. Compared to their respective values at pH 2, the G(Ox*) increased with almost a linear slope of approximately 0.024 micromol J(-1) for H0(-1) (or pH(-1)) up to H0 -6.0 (Ox* = *OH + SO4*-), whereas G(H*) increased with a slope of approximately 0.033 micromol J(-1) for H0(-1) (or pH(-1)) up to H0 -5.0. In the presence of > 10 M acid (H0 < -5.0), phenol was oxidized to its radical cation, C6H5OH*+, which further reacted with phenol and generated the secondary, dimeric radical cation, (C6H5OH)2*+, following an equilibrium reaction C6H5OH*+ + C6H5OH <==> (C6H5OH)2*+, with K(eq) = 315 +/- 15 M(-1). The two cationic radicals were characterized from their individual UV-vis absorption spectra and acidity. The C6H5OH*+ absorption peaks are centered at 276 and 419 nm, and it was found to be more acidic (pKa = -2.75 +/- 0.05) than (C6H5OH)2*+ (pKa = -1.98 +/- 0.02), having its major peak at 410 nm. On the other hand, in the presence of < 6.5 M acid the C6H5O* reactions followed the radical dimerization route, independent of the parent phenol concentration.  相似文献   

15.
The branching ratios for the reactions of attachment of hydroxyl radical to propene and hydrogen-atom abstraction were measured at 298 K over the buffer gas pressure range 60-400 Torr (N(2)) using a subatmospheric pressure turbulent flow reactor coupled with a chemical ionization quadrupole mass spectrometer. Isotopically enriched water H(2)(18)O was used to produce (18)O-labeled hydroxyl radicals in reaction with fluorine atoms. The β-hydroxypropyl radicals formed in the attachment reactions 1a and 1b , OH + C(3)H(6) → CH(2)(OH)C(?)HCH(3) (eq 1a ) and OH + C(3)H(6) → C(?)H(2)CH(OH)CH(3) (eq 1b ), were converted to formaldehyde and acetaldehyde in a sequence of secondary reactions in O(2)- and NO-containing environment. The (18)O-labeling propagates to the final products, allowing determination of the branching ratio for the attachment channels of reaction 1. The measured branching ratio for attachment is β(1b) = k(1b)/(k(1a) + k(1b)) = 0.51 ± 0.03, independent of pressure over the 60-400 Torr pressure range. An upper limit on the hydrogen-abstraction channel, OH + C(3)H(6) → H(2)O + C(3)H(5) (eq 1c ), was determined by measuring the water yield in reactions of OH and OD radicals (produced via H(D) + NO(2) → OH(OD) + NO reactions) with C(3)H(6) as k(1c)/(k(1a) + k(1b) + k(1c)) < 0.05 (at 298 K, 200 Torr N(2)).  相似文献   

16.
Tin silicate species have shown good catalytic activity in various oxidation reactions. In an attempt to mimic surface tin species, several tin containing silsesquioxanes have been synthesized. Incompletely condensed silsesquioxanes (c-C5H9)7Si7O9(OH)3 and (c-C5H9)7Si7O9(OSiMe3)(OH)2 were reacted with common tin-precursors, which afforded several silsesquioxane ligated tin compounds. Divalent stannasilsesquioxanes form dimers of the type [(c-C5H9)7Si7O11(OX)Sn]2(X=H, SiMe3) with three-coordinated tin centers. The three-coordinated tin(II) are hydrolytically unstable whereas the octahedrally surrounded tetravalent stannasilsesquioxanes [(c-C5H9)7Si7O11(OX)]Sn(acac)2(X=H, OSiMe3) are hydrolytically robust. An unprecedented anionic trimeric cluster, [[(c-C5H9)7Si7O12Sn]3(mu2-OH)3(mu3-OH)]-[HNEt3]+, stabilized by bridging hydroxyl groups was formed when the product formed upon reacting (c-C5H9)7Si7O9(OH)3 with SnCl4 was slowly hydrolyzed. The stannasilsesquioxanes showed no catalytic activity in oxidation reactions.  相似文献   

17.
Linear perfluorinated aldehydes (PFALs, CnF2n+1CHO) are important intermediate species in the atmospheric oxidation pathway of many polyfluorinated compounds. PFALs can be further oxidized in the gas phase to give perfluorinated carboxylic acids (PFCAs, CnF2n+1C(O)OH, n = 6, 12) which have been detected in animal tissues and at low parts per billion levels in human blood sera. In this paper, we report ab initio quantum chemistry calculations of the decarbonylation kinetics of CnF2n+1CO radicals. Our results show that CnF2n+1CO radicals have a strong tendency to decompose to give CnF2n+1 and CO under atmospheric conditions: the Arrhenius activation energies for decarbonylation of CF3CO, C2F5CO, and C3F7CO obtained using PMP4/6-311++G(2d,p) are 8.8, 6.6, and 5.8 kcal/mol, respectively, each of which is about 5 kcal/mol lower than the barrier for the corresponding nonfluorinated radicals. The lowering of the barrier for decarbonylation of CnF2n+1CO relative to that of CnH2n+1CO is well explained by electron withdrawal by F atoms that serve to weaken the critical C-CO bond. These results have important implications for the atmospheric fate of PFALs and the atmospheric pathways to PFCAs. The main effect of decarbonylation of CnF2n+1CO is to decrease the molar yield of CnF2n+1C(O)OH; if 100% of the CnF2n+1CO decompose, the yield of CnF2n+1C(O)OH must be zero. There is considerable scope for additional experimental and theoretical studies.  相似文献   

18.
Formally, triple-bonded dimetallynes ArEEAr [E = Ge (1), Sn (2); Ar = C(6)H(3)-2,6-(C(6)H(3)-2,6-(i)Pr(2))(2)] have been previously shown to activate aliphatic, allylic C-H bonds in cyclic olefins, cyclopentadiene (CpH), cyclopentene (c-C(5)H(8)) and 1,4-cyclohexadiene, with intriguing selectivity. In the case of the five-membered carbocycles, cyclopentadienyl species ArECp [E = Ge (3), Sn (4)] are formed. In this study, we examine the mechanisms for activation of CpH and c-C(5)H(8) using experimental methods and describe a new product found from the reaction between 1 and c-C(5)H(8), an asymmetrically substituted digermene ArGe(H)Ge(c-C(5)H(9))Ar (5), crystallized in 46% yield. This compound contains a hydrogenated cyclopentyl moiety and is found to be produced in a 3:2 ratio with 3, explaining the fate of the liberated H atoms following triple C-H activation. We show that when these C-H activation reactions are carried out in the presence of tert-butyl ethylene (excess), compounds {ArE(CH(2)CH(2)tBu)}(2) [E = Ge(8), Sn(9)] are obtained in addition to ArECp; in the case of CpH, the neohexyl complexes replace the production of H(2) gas, and for c-C(5)H(8) they displace cyclopentyl product 5 and account for all the hydrogen removed in the dehydroaromatization reactions. To confirm the source of 8 and 9, it was demonstrated that these molecules are formed cleanly between the reaction of (ArEH)(2) [E = Ge(6), Sn(7)] and tert-butyl ethylene, new examples of noncatalyzed hydro-germylation and -stannylation. Therefore, the presence of transient hydrides of the type 6 and 7 can be surmised to be reactive intermediates in the production of 3 and 4, along with H(2), from 1 and 2 and CpH (respectively), or the formation of 3 and 5 from 1. The reaction of 6 or 7 with CpH gave 3 or 4, respectively, with concomitant H(2) evolution, demonstrating the basic nature of these low-valent group 14 element hydrides and their key role in the 'cascade' of C-H activation steps. Additionally, during the course of these studies a new polycyclic compound (ArGe)(2)(C(7)H(12)) (10) was obtained in 60% yield from the reaction of 1,6-heptadiene and 1 via double [2 + 2] cycloaddition and gives evidence for a nonradical mechanism for these types of reactions.  相似文献   

19.
Intramolecularly OHO[double bond, length as m-dash]C hydrogen bonded phenols, 2-HO-C6H2-3,5-(t-Bu)2-CONH-t-Bu (1-OH), 2-HO-C6H2-5-t-Bu-1,3-(CONH-t-Bu)2 (2-OH) and 2-HO-C6H2-3,5-(t-Bu)2-NHCO-t-Bu (4-OH), were synthesized and their phenolate anions were prepared as tetraethylammonium salts (-1O-(NEt4+), 2-O-(NEt4+) and 4-O-(NEt4+)) with intramolecular NHO(oxyanion) hydrogen bonds. 4-HO-C(6)H(2)-3,5-t-Bu(2)-CONH-t-Bu (3-OH) and its phenolate anion, 3-O-(NEt4+), were synthesized as non-hydrogen bonded references. The presence of intramolecular hydrogen bonds was established through the crystallographic analysis and/or (1)H NMR spectroscopic results. Intramolecular NHO(phenol) hydrogen bonds shift the pK(a) of the phenol to a more acidic value. The results of cyclic voltammetry show that the intramolecular OH...O=C hydrogen bond negatively shifts the oxidation potential of the phenol. In contrast, the intramolecular NHO(oxyanion) hydrogen bond positively shifts the oxidation potential of the phenolate anion, preventing oxidation. These contributions of the hydrogen bond to the pKa value and the oxidation potentials probably play an important role in the formation of a tyrosyl radical in photosystem II.  相似文献   

20.
A detailed chemical kinetic model has been developed to theoretically predict the pyrolysis behavior of phenol‐type monolignol compounds (1‐(4‐hydroxyphenyl)prop‐2‐en‐1‐one, HPP; p‐coumaryl alcohol, 3‐hydroxy‐1‐(4‐hydroxyphenyl)propan‐1‐one, HHPP; 1‐(4‐hydroxyphenyl)propane‐1,3‐diol, HPPD) released from the primary heterogeneous pyrolysis of lignin. The possible thermal decomposition pathways involving unimolecular decomposition, H‐addition, and H‐abstraction by H and CH3 radicals were investigated by comparing the activation energies calculated at the M06–2X/6–311++G(d,p) level of theory. The results indicated that all phenol‐type monolignol compounds convert to phenol by side‐chain cleavage. p‐Coumaryl alcohol decomposes into phenol via the formation of 4‐vinylphenol, whereas HPP, HHPP, and HPPD decompose into phenol via the formation of 4‐hydroxybenzaldehyde. The pyrolytic pathways focusing on the reactivity of the hydroxyl group in HPP and producing cyclopentadiene (cyc‐C5H6) were also investigated. The transition state theory (TST) rate constants for all the proposed elementary reaction channels were calculated at the high‐pressure limit in the temperature range of 300–1500 K. The kinetic analysis predicted the two favorable unimolecular decomposition pathways in HPP: the one is the dominant channel below 1000 K to produce cyc‐C5H6, and the other is above 1000 K to yield phenol (C6H5OH).  相似文献   

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