Issue 36, 2018

The near-UV absorber OSSO and its isomers

Abstract

Disulfur dioxide, OSSO, has been proposed as the enigmatic “near-UV absorber” in the yellowish atmosphere of Venus. However, the fundamentally important spectroscopic properties and photochemistry of OSSO are scarcely documented. By either condensing gaseous SO or 266 laser photolysis of an S2⋯O2 complex in Ar or N2 at 15 K, syn-OSSO, anti-OSSO, and cyclic OS([double bond, length as m-dash]O)S were identified by IR and UV/Vis spectroscopy for the first time. The observed absorptions (λmax) for OSSO at 517 and 390 nm coincide with the near-UV absorption (320–400 nm) found in the Venus clouds by photometric measurements with the Pioneer Venus orbiter. Subsequent UV light irradiation (365 nm) depletes syn-OSSO and anti-OSSO and yields a fourth isomer, syn-OSOS, with concomitant dissociation into SO2 and elemental sulfur.

Graphical abstract: The near-UV absorber OSSO and its isomers

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Communication
Submitted
05 Feb 2018
Accepted
27 Feb 2018
First published
27 Feb 2018

Chem. Commun., 2018,54, 4517-4520

The near-UV absorber OSSO and its isomers

Z. Wu, H. Wan, J. Xu, B. Lu, Y. Lu, A. K. Eckhardt, P. R. Schreiner, C. Xie, H. Guo and X. Zeng, Chem. Commun., 2018, 54, 4517 DOI: 10.1039/C8CC00999F

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