Phenyl radical + propene: a prototypical reaction surface for aromatic-catalyzed 1,2-hydrogen-migration and subsequent resonance-stabilized radical formation
The C[subscript 9]H[subscript 11] potential energy surface (PES) was experimentally and theoretically explored because it is a relatively simple, prototypical alkylaromatic radical system. Although the C[subscript 9]H[subscript 11] PES has already been extensively studied both experimentally (under...
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Format: | Article |
Language: | English |
Published: |
Royal Society of Chemistry (RSC),
2019-03-12T19:37:30Z.
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Online Access: | Get fulltext |
Summary: | The C[subscript 9]H[subscript 11] potential energy surface (PES) was experimentally and theoretically explored because it is a relatively simple, prototypical alkylaromatic radical system. Although the C[subscript 9]H[subscript 11] PES has already been extensively studied both experimentally (under single-collision and thermal conditions) and theoretically, new insights were made in this work by taking a new experimental approach: flash photolysis combined with time-resolved molecular beam mass spectrometry (MBMS) and visible laser absorbance. The C[subscript 9]H[subscript 11] PES was experimentally accessed by photolytic generation of the phenyl radical and subsequent reaction with excess propene (C[subscript 6]H[subscript 5] + C[subscript 3]H[subscript 6]). The overall kinetics of C[subscript 6]H[subscript 5] + C[subscript 3]H[subscript 6] was measured using laser absorbance with high time-resolution from 300 to 700 K and was found to be in agreement with earlier measurements over a lower temperature range. Five major product channels of C[subscript 6]H[subscript 5] + C[subscript 3]H[subscript 6] were observed with MBMS at 600 and 700 K, four of which were expected: hydrogen (H)-abstraction (measured by the stable benzene, C[subscript 6]H[subscript 6], product), methyl radical (CH[subscript 3])-loss (styrene detected), H-loss (phenylpropene isomers detected) and radical adduct stabilization. The fifth, unexpected product observed was the benzyl radical, which was rationalized by the inclusion of a previously unreported pathway on the C[subscript 9]H[subscript 11] PES: aromatic-catalysed 1,2-H-migration and subsequent resonance stabilized radical (RSR, benzyl radical in this case) formation. The current theoretical understanding of the C[subscript 9]H[subscript 11] PES was supported (including the aromatic-catalyzed pathway) by quantitative comparisons between modelled and experimental MBMS results. At 700 K, the branching to styrene + CH[subscript 3] was 2-4 times greater than that of any other product channel, while benzyl radical + C[subscript 2]H[subscript 4] from the aromatic-catalyzed pathway accounted for ∼10% of the branching. Single-collision conditions were also simulated on the updated PES to explain why previous crossed molecular beam experiments did not see evidence of the aromatic-catalyzed pathway. This experimentally validated knowledge of the C[subscript 9]H[subscript 11] PES was added to the database of the open-source Reaction Mechanism Generator (RMG), which was then used to generalize the findings on the C[subscript 9]H[subscript 11] PES to a slightly more complicated alkylaromatic system. Think Global Education Trust |
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