Open Access Article
Sara E. Murphy†
*a,
John D. Crounse
a,
Andras Sun Poulsenb,
Juliette E. Lipsona,
Henrik G. Kjaergaard
b and
Paul O. Wennberg
ac
aCalifornia Institute of Technology, Department of Geological and Planetary Sciences, Pasadena, CA, USA. E-mail: semurphy@ucla.edu
bUniversity of Copenhagen, Department of Chemistry, Copenhagen, Denmark
cCalifornia Institute of Technology, Department of Engineering and Applied Sciences, Pasadena, CA, USA
First published on 27th October 2025
The formation of a peroxide accretion product (ROOR) has recently been shown to be a significant channel in self- and cross-reactions of peroxy radicals (RO2) in the gas-phase. Here, we examine the formation of this accretion product in the self- and cross-reactions of RO2 derived from the OH-initiated oxidation of propene, cis-2-butene, and methylpropene in the presence of ethene. We measure the formation rate coefficient of the various accretion products in each system relative to the formation rate coefficient of the ethene-derived ROOR, which was measured in our previous work. We find that the accretion product forms in all of the studied self- and cross-reactions. The measured ROOR formation rate coefficient for the self-reaction decreases by approximately an order of magnitude with increasing substitution, with average rate coefficients of 4.7 × 10−13 cm3 molec−1 s−1 for primary hydroxy peroxy radicals, 2.7 × 10−14 cm3 molec−1 s−1 for secondary hydroxy peroxy radicals, and 8.0 × 10−16 cm3 molec−1 s−1 for the tertiary hydroxy peroxy radical. The cross-reaction rate coefficients of secondary and tertiary peroxy radicals with primary peroxy radicals are both higher than the corresponsing self-reactions, and also decrease with increasing radical substitution. We estimate the branching fraction to the formation of the ROOR for these peroxy radical self- and cross-reactions and find that branching fractions range from 0.03–0.33, with self- and cross-reactions of primary peroxy radicals having the highest branching fractions. Finally, we compare the reaction and ROOR formation rate coefficients of self- and cross-reactions of small RO2, and determine that the arithmetic mean of self-reaction rate coefficients provides a suitable method for estimating cross-reaction rate coefficients.
Environmental significanceOrganic peroxy radicals (RO2), formed in the oxidation of volatile organic compounds (VOCs), play a crucial role in processes that affect the formation of atmospheric pollutants, including particulate matter and ozone. Reactions of these RO2 can propagate or terminate the radical cycle, with each fate yielding distinct atmospheric impacts. The structural diversity of peroxy radicals in the atmosphere necessitates the study of the relationship between these reaction pathways and RO2 structure, especially for accurate air quality and climate modeling. In this work, we quantify the formation rate coefficients for the formation of low volatility accretion products (ROOR) in the self- and cross-reactions of three small alkene-derived hydroxy peroxy radicals. We find that accretion products form in all the systems studied here and that the formation rate coefficients exhibit a decrease with increasing peroxy radical substitution. These results suggest that ROOR, which could play a role in the formation of particulate matter, can form for a variety of precursors, especially in the reactions of primary peroxy radicals. |
In regions where NOx is low, RO2 will undergo unimolecular reaction10 or bimolecular reactions with (primarily) HO2 or other RO2.7,11 This chemistry is important in remote regions and is even becoming important in urban areas as NOx continues to decrease due to emission regulations.12,13 The reaction of RO2 with HO2 can, similarly to the reaction with NO, lead to radical propagation (Reaction 1b and 1c) or radical termination (Reaction 1a) via the formation of a hydroperoxide (ROOH).7
| RO2 + HO2 → ROOH + O2 | (1a) |
| →RO + OH + O2 | (1b) |
→R–H O + HO2 + OH
| (1c) |
While Reaction 1a is the dominant pathway for most alkyl peroxy radicals, Reactions 1c and 1b have been observed to play an important role in the reactions of oxygenated peroxy radicals, including β-hydroxy peroxy radicals.11 Although the reaction rate coefficient of RO2 with HO2 and the branching to products remains uncertain for many peroxy radicals, structure activity relationships suggest that the rate coefficient of the RO2 + HO2 reaction largely depends on the number of heavy atoms in the peroxy radical and exhibits little dependence on substitution or structure.14
The reaction of RO2 with R′O2 (the cross-reaction, Reaction 2) or with itself (the self-reaction, Reaction 2 with R′ = R) proceeds primarily via three reaction pathways: the formation of two alkoxy radicals (Reaction 2a), the formation of an alcohol and a carbonyl (Reaction 2b and 2c), or the formation of a peroxide accretion product (Reaction 2d).7,11
| RO2 + R′O2 → RO + R′O + O2 | (2a) |
→R′OH + R–H O + O2
| (2b) |
→ROH + R′–H O + O2
| (2c) |
| →ROOR′ + O2 | (2d) |
Generally, when R′ = R, the rate of Reaction 2 decreases as the substitution of the peroxy radical increases, and increases with the addition of a hydroxy or acyl substituent.11,15 Although this trend has been observed for self-reactions, the relationship between the kinetics of cross-reactions (R ≠ R′) and self-reaction rate coefficients of the constituent peroxy radicals (RO2 and R′O2) remains poorly characterized.
The branching to the various products of Reaction 2 remains uncertain and has been the focus of substantial recent research. Most notably, it was previously widely accepted that Reaction 2d was negligible, as the resulting accretion products were not observed in laboratory oxidation studies and the proposed formation mechanism, involving an intersystem crossing, appeared unfavorable.7,16,17 However, several recent studies have reported the formation of dimers (compounds with approximately twice the carbon number of the original peroxy radicals) in various oxidation systems. While some of these dimers are esters formed in the particle-phase18 or via other gas-phase accretion mechanisms,19 several of these products observed with chemical ionization mass spectrometry (CIMS) have masses consistent with the formation of the ROOR and are reported to form at appreciable rates that even approach the collision rate.15,20–23 The formation of the ROOR is atmospherically significant both because it terminates the radical cycle (at least temporarily) and because these products have low volatilities and are likely to play a role in the formation of SOA. In fact, these compounds have been observed in the remote ambient environment in both the gas- and the particle-phase, demonstrating the role that these dimers play in particle formation.24 Additionally, a possible fifth pathway for Reaction 2 leading to an alkoxy radical, carbonyl, and HO2 was proposed for the self-reaction of the hydroxy ethyl peroxy radical,25 further highlighting the need for additional study of the self-reaction for a variety of peroxy radical precursors.
Recently, accretion product formation has been reported for the self-reactions of ethyl peroxy,26 hydroxy ethyl peroxy,25 and propyl peroxy radicals,27 with branching fractions of 10(±5)%, 23(±5)%, and 10(±5)%, respectively. In each of these studies, the identity of the dimers was confirmed to be the ROOR formed in Reaction 2d by either gas chromatography or vacuum ultraviolet (VUV) photoionization mass spectrometry. The observation of significant branching to accretion product formation in the self-reactions of these small peroxy radicals is compatible with recent studies of the self-reaction of ethyl peroxy radicals finding lower branching to alkoxy radical formation than previous studies.28,29
Despite these recent insights into the formation of accretion products via peroxy radical self- and cross-reactions, these studies have only been conducted for a limited number of peroxy radical precursors. There have been few studies that have systematically examined the relationship between the rate of accretion product formation and peroxy radical structure.30 However, it is necessary to probe this relationship to predict the formation rate of the accretion product for the wide variety of peroxy radicals present in the atmosphere.
In this study, we begin to fill this gap by expanding on our previous study of the formation of the accretion product in ethene-derived hydroxy peroxy radical systems.25 Specifically, we show that the accretion product forms in a variety of small-alkene-derived hydroxy peroxy radical self- and cross-reactions and measure the formation rate coefficient of the ROOR in each of these oxidation systems relative to the formation rate coefficient of the ethene-derived accretion product. By measuring this rate in the propene, methylpropene (isobutene), and cis-2-butene oxidation systems, we examine the relationship between accretion product formation and structure for these small hydroxy peroxy radicals. Using literature values for the absolute rate coefficients where available, we further estimate the branching to the accretion product for the reactions examined here.
![]() | (3) |
![]() | (4) |
In several of the experiments reported here, the fraction of alkene reacted over the photolysis period was estimated by simultaneously observing the formation of glycolaldehyde in the reaction of ethylene glycol with OH (Reaction 5).
![]() | (5) |
The recommended value for the reaction of ethylene glycol with OH is 1.45 × 10−11 cm3 molecule−1 s−1 (Δlog
k = ±0.20).31 In experiments where ethylene glycol was used as a probe of OH exposure ([OH] × Δt), 20–70 ppbv of ethylene glycol was injected. The OH exposure was then calculated using the measured production rate of glycolaldehyde from a known concentration of ethylene glycol. This calculation yielded estimated OH exposures ranging between 0.4–6.0 × 109 molecules cm−3 s across the various precursors and conditions used here. In these systems, the OH exposure was also calculated using our photochemical box model, and values agree within a factor of 2. Therefore, in experiments in which no OH probe was used, the photochemical box model was used to estimate the fraction of reacted alkene.
We performed a suite of experiments at ambient pressure (P = 753 ± 3 torr) and room temperature (T = 295.2 ± 0.6 K) to quantify the product of the self-/cross-reaction rate coefficient (k2) times the branching fraction leading to accretion products (α2d) of several RO2 + R′O2 reactions relative to the value measured for ethene in our previous work (k2α2d = 5.5(±2.6) × 10−13 cm3 molecule−1 s−1).25 We oxidized mixtures of ethene with propene, 2-methylpropene (isobutene), or cis-2-butene and observed the formation of accretion products from all combinations of the resulting RO2 + R′O2 reactions. To estimate k2α2d, experiments were performed under conditions where most (>90%) of the peroxy radicals reacted with HO2 via Reaction 1a to form ROOH. Under these conditions, the ratios of the observed concentrations of ROOH provide a constraint on the ratios of the parent RO2 concentrations (eqn (6)):
![]() | (6) |
To ensure that the [HO2]/[RO2] ratio satisfies the condition that >90% of RO2 react with HO2, we add sufficient concentrations of methanol such that the reaction of OH with methanol exceeds the reaction of OH with the alkenes, as has been described previously.25 In the oxidation experiments performed in this study, the relative concentrations of methanol and parent hydrocarbon yielded steady state [HO2]/[RO2] ratios above 2.0 (as estimated by our box model). Because the rate coefficients for the reaction of RO2 with HO2 (k1) are generally more than an order of magnitude faster than the rate coefficients of the self- and cross-reactions (k2) for the systems studied here, the requirement that the peroxy radicals react overwhelmingly with HO2 is satisfied under these conditions.
A measurement of k2α2d for each alkene can then be obtained from the measured ratio of the accretion product of interest to the ethene-derived accretion product. For the self-reaction of a given isomer of a peroxy radical derived from a non-ethene hydrocarbon (in this case propene, methylpropene, or cis-2-butene), the k2,HCα2d,HC value is given by eqn (7), where the ratio of the RO2 concentrations is obtained from eqn (6):
![]() | (7) |
If the accretion product of interest is formed via the cross-reaction of two different isomers of the same non-ethene hydrocarbon (HCa and HCb), this equation becomes:
![]() | (8) |
Finally, for determination of the k2α2d value for the cross-reaction between an isomer of a non-ethene hydrocarbon and ethene, eqn (7) reduces to:
![]() | (9) |
Using eqn (7)–(9), we calculate the k2α2d values for all of the self- and cross-reactions of the peroxy radical systems studied here.
Our estimate of k2α2d is particularly sensitive to k1 and α1a. k1 is estimated here using the structure activity relationship (SAR) found in Wennberg et al.14 This rate coefficient has been measured for the primary peroxy radical derived via the oxidation of 2-methylpropene (k1 = 1.5(±0.9) × 10−11 cm3 molecule−1 s−1)6 and the secondary peroxy radical derived via the oxidation of cis-2-butene (k1 = 1.5(±0.4) × 10−11 cm3 molecule−1 s−1).5 These measured values are the same as those values predicted by the structure–activity relationship within error (1.6 × 10−11 cm3 molecule−1 s−1 at 295 K for both compounds), and so the SAR values are used in all cases for consistency.
Estimates of α1a were derived from the concentration of ROOH formed in the high HO2 experiments. In these experiments, the amount of ROOH formed divided by the concentration of the reacted alkene is approximately equal to the branching fraction of Reaction 1a (eqn (10)).
![]() | (10) |
According our photochemical box model, for the conditions of our experiments, eqn (10) is accurate to better than 9%. There is additional error induced by the estimation of the reacted alkene used in the calculation of α1a. We assign the modelled OH exposures, and by extension the fraction of reacted alkene, an uncertainty of 50%. This is by far the largest source of uncertainty in the estimation of α1a. Further, this error is much larger than the uncertainties in the values of k1. Therefore, we assign the α1a an uncertainty of 50% and the overall calculation of k2α2d a corresponding uncertainty of 50%.
Finally, to assign elution temperatures to ROOR isomers in the gas chromatograms, we performed experiments where we did not add methanol. This maximized the fraction of RO2 undergoing self- and cross-reactions and thus the signal-to-noise ratios of the resulting chromatograms. These experiments are labeled ‘high RO2’ in the discussion below and generally contained [HO2]/[RO2] ratios that were much less than 1.
The Caltech GC-CIMS uses a high resolution (m/Δm ∼ 3000) time-of-flight mass spectrometer with CF3O− reagent to ionize and detect analytes. CF3O− is produced by flowing CF3OOCF3 in N2 through a polonium-210 ionizer (NRD, LLC). In direct sampling mode, the analyte gas is sampled at approximately 2000 sccm, and 180 sccm of this sample passes through a Teflon-coated metal critical orifice into a Teflon-coated glass flow tube that is maintained at a pressure of approximately 35 mbar. Here, the sample is diluted with N2 and turbulently mixes with 380 sccm flow of N2 from the ion source. The analytes are then ionized by reaction with the reagent ion. For most of the compounds considered here, the analyte forms a cluster with the reagent ion that appears at a mass-to-charge ratio (m/z) of the molecular weight (mw) of the compound plus the mass of CF3O− (m/z = mw + 85). However, analytes may also undergo a fluorine transfer reaction, thus appearing at a mass-to-charge ratio equal to the molecular weight of the analyte plus the mass of fluorine (m/z = mw + 19). Although fragmentation in this ionization scheme is minimal compared to the fragmentation observed in other chemical ionization schemes, some compounds still lead to characteristic fragments. For example, organic hydroperoxides characteristically form fragment ions at m/z 63 (FCO2−) and m/z 81.33–35 The ionized analytes are then directed into the mass spectrometer through a pinhole and a conical hexapole ion guide, where they are subsequently detected. Signals were collected for mass-to-charge ratios between m/z 19 and m/z 396.
The metal-free, low-pressure gas chromatograph consists of a 2 meter fused silica column (Restek RTX-1701) that is cooled via the expansion of liquid CO2 and heated with resistance heaters. During GC sampling, the analyte gas was sampled at approximately 1200 sccm and diluted by a factor of 2–6 via the addition of dry nitrogen flow. A fraction of the diluted sample flow was passed through a small trap upstream of the column, where analytes were collected. Trapping temperatures (−10 °C, −20 °C, or −30 °C), trapping times (2–10 min), and dilution factors were chosen to maximize the concentration of analyte trapped while avoiding the trapping of water. After trapping, the temperature was increased to 130 °C at a pre-determined temperature program with 5 sccm of nitrogen flowing through the trap and column. The effluent was then directed into the flow tube with a 200 sccm pickup flow of nitrogen and detected by the CIMS. The CIMS automatically switches between sampling from the GC and sampling directly from the chamber. A complete list of the temperature ramps and trapping conditions used in these experiments is given in the SI. For each experiment, a background chromatogram was taken prior to the initiation of oxidation and three chromatograms were taken after the oxidation period.
CF3O− binds strongly to multifunctional organic compounds,36 such that the fraction of the analyte that undergoes ionization generally depends on the ion-molecule collision rate. For analytes that form weakly bound clusters (such as H2O2), not every collision results in the formation of a stable ion cluster. Such analytes are identified by probing the relationship between sensitivity and temperature and humidity, as the sensitivity of these compounds tends to exhibit a negative dependence on temperature and often a complex dependence on water concentration.37 The efficiency of cluster formation following collision may decrease due to fragmentation of the product ion and/or subsequent ligand exchange reactions. In our previous work on the ethene-derived peroxy radical self-reaction, we found that the clusters of the resulting RO2 products with the reagent ion were well bound and exhibited little fragmentation. Due to the similar sizes and chemical structures of the compounds studied here and those probed in the prior study, we assume that the compounds considered in this study are similarly well-bound, and thus that sensitivities scale with ion-molecule collision rates. The sensitivities of the compounds measured in this study are estimated by calculating their ion-molecule collision rates relative to ethylene glycol and using this scaling factor to obtain the sensitivity from the measured ethylene glycol sensitivity. The calculated ion-molecule collision rates relative to ethylene glycol are given in the SI and are obtained using the methods outlined in Su et al.38 and quantum calculations of the conformer-weighted dipole moments and polarizabilities of the relevant compounds.39 The calculated rates vary by ±9% for the molecules of interest here.
The GC elution efficiency, which encompasses the combined effects of collection and transmission efficiencies, was determined for each compound by comparison of the sum of the total GC signal to the average CIMS signal obtained in direct sampling without chromatographic separation. These values were determined for a variety of trapping temperatures, and thus a variety of collection efficiencies. The measured elution efficiencies ranged between 10% and 100% – the lowest values generally reflect small ketones and alcohols for which the trapping was inefficient. The average elution efficiencies of each of the relevant compounds are given in the SI.
To account for elution efficiencies less than unity in the GC, we did not calculate the concentration of each isomer directly from the integrated GC signal. Rather, the relative proportions of the isomers of each compound were calculated using the ratio between the fitted peak areas. These proportions were subsequently multiplied by the total CIMS direct-sampling signal to determine the concentrations of each isomer. In this calculation, we implicitly assume that the direct-sampling signal represents the total concentration of a given set of isobaric isomers and that the trapping and transmission efficiencies of these different isomers are the same.
Ethene (≥99.5%, Sigma-Aldrich), methanol (≥99.9%, Sigma-Aldrich), 2-methylpropene (99%, Sigma Aldrich), cis-2-butene (≥99%, Sigma Aldrich), and propene (≥99%, Sigma Aldrich) samples were measured into 500 mL glass bulbs via a manometric apparatus in which the bulb was attached simultaneously to a vacuum/N2 system and to the reagent source. The desired concentration of the relevant hydrocarbon was then obtained by serial dilution with pressure measurements conducted using pressure sensors (MKS 1000 and 10 Torr baratron pressure transducers). The purity of the samples and the concentrations measured using manometry were confirmed by taking IR spectra in a 19 cm pyrex FTIR cell with CaF2 windows and fitting the resulting spectra to cross sections obtained from the PNNL IR Database.41 The measurements taken with manometry and the concentration calculated from the FTIR spectra agree to within 30%.
Two isomers of the ROOH product are expected to form: that derived from the primary RO2, pMP-ROOH, and that derived from the tertiary RO2, tMP-ROOH. In experiments with high HO2/RO2 ratios
, the distribution of these products is expected to reflect the ratio of the production rates of the pMP and tMP due to the lack of other competitive loss channels, i.e. all RO2 react with HO2 to form ROOH.14 We expect the observed ratios of the ROOH products to match those measured in Teng et al., which were measured under conditions where RO2 self-reaction chemistry was negligible and are taken here as an accurate measurement of the relative production rates of the peroxy radical isomers (21(±2)%/79(±2%) for pMP-ROOH/tMP-ROOH).42 In the high HO2 experiments presented in this study, the average distribution of pMP-ROOH/tMP-ROOH is 16(±1)%/84(±1)% (Fig. 1c). This is within 5% of the distribution found by Teng et al., confirming that the primary loss of RO2 in these experiments is reaction with HO2 (although some loss due to RO2 self-reaction chemistry is still expected).
In the high RO2 regime
, the fraction of ROOH as pMP-ROOH is significantly lower than that observed in the high HO2 condition, with an average distribution of 3(±1)% pMP-ROOH and 97(±1)% tMP-ROOH (Fig. 1a). Under these conditions, the distribution of pMP-ROOH and tMP-ROOH is significantly altered by the loss rates of tMP and pMP RO2 due to self- and cross-reaction chemistry. The dramatic decrease in the production of pMP-ROOH relative to tMP-ROOH when RO2 self- and cross-reactions are prominent is consistent with previous observations that the rate of self- and cross-reactions of primary peroxy radicals are rapid compared to the self-reactions of tertiary peroxy radicals.11
Under the high RO2 condition, three isomers at the mass of the accretion product (m/z 263) are observed, consistent with the expected products outlined in Scheme 1. Therefore, we see that the accretion product is formed at appreciable rates in all three of the possible self- and cross-reactions in this oxidation system. The isomeric distribution of the methylpropene-derived accretion product formed in Reaction 2 is influenced by the competing factors of peroxy radical abundance and reaction rate. Although the branching to the formation of tertiary peroxy radicals in the OH-initiated oxidation of 2-methylpropene is approximately 80%,42 and therefore tMP will be more abundant than pMP, the self-reactions of tertiary peroxy radicals are generally several orders of magnitude slower than those of primary peroxy radicals.7,11
These competing factors are evident in the distribution of the ROOR isomers under varying conditions, as shown in Fig. 1. The peak assignments given in Fig. 1 follow the observation that, in the Caltech GC-CIMS instrument, compounds with primary –OH groups elute at higher temperatures than those with tertiary –OH groups due to the corresponding decrease in interaction strength between the analyte and the column.43 The ROOR produced in the cross-reaction of pMP and tMP (p,t-MP-ROOR) is produced in the highest proportion under high RO2 conditions, constituting on average 69(±4)% of the total concentration of methylpropene-derived accretion products (Fig. 1b). t,t-MP-ROOR constitutes 23(±3)% of this signal, with 7(±2)% of the signal on average attributed to the peroxide formed in the self-reaction of pMP (p,p-MP-ROOR) (Fig. 1b). Clearly, the cross-reaction between pMP and tMP is favored as a sink of tMP over the self-reaction. However, pMP reacts quickly, such that the steady state concentration of pMP is quite low, as demonstrated by the low proportion of pMP-ROOH relative to tMP-ROOH. Therefore, a significant concentration of t,t-MP-ROOR is formed despite the slow self-reaction of tertiary peroxy radicals. These observations are further quantified and discussed in the section on ROOR formation rate coefficients below.
In experiments with high HO2/RO2 ratios, 2-methylpropene and ethene were oxidized together to measure the relative production rates of the ethene- and methylpropene-derived accretion products, as described in the Methods section. Under these conditions, the proportion of t,t-MP-ROOR decreases appreciably to between 0–5% of the total methylpropene-derived ROOR concentration (Fig. 1e). The signal-to-noise ratio of this peak is very low, with the peak indistinguishable from the noise in some cases – therefore, significant uncertainty is assigned to this fitted peak area. On the other hand, the concentrations of p,p-MP-ROOR and p,t-MP-ROOR are comparable, with average proportions of 37(±1)% and 61(±2)%, respectively. Further, two compounds are observed at m/z 235, consistent with accretion products formed in the cross-reactions of 2-methylpropene and ethene-derived peroxy radicals (E,pMP-ROOR and E,tMP-ROOR, Fig. 1d). These compounds are produced in unequal proportions, with a distribution of 78(±3)%/22(±3)%. We assign the less prominent peak to E,tMP-ROOR by comparison to the elution temperature of the accretion product formed in the oxidation of t-butanol in the presence of ethene (see Fig. S3). This assignment also aligns with previous observations that isomers with primary OH groups elute at warmer temperatures than isomers with more substituted OH groups. The prominence of E,pMP-ROOR suggests that the formation of the accretion product in the cross reaction of the ethene-derived peroxy radical (pE) and pMP is quite fast. These observations are discussed further in the section on ROOR formation rate coefficients.
Two diasteromers of the peroxy radical are formed, the reactions of which are expected to produce multiple stereoisomers of the resulting products (B-ROOH, B-ROOR, and 2,3-butanediol). In agreement with this expectation, two closely separated peaks are observed in the chromatogram at m/z 175, the mass-to-charge ratio at which 2,3-butanediol appears in the CIMS, with a distribution of 34(±8)%/66(±8)% in the high RO2
experiments (Fig. 2b). Comparison of this chromatogram with those of meso and R,R-2,3-butanediol standards confirms the identity of these peaks as the stereoisomers of 2,3-butanediol (see Fig. S1). The elution temperature of the minor peak is consistent with a mixture of the enantiomers (R,R and S,S), while the major peak is consistent with the meso compound (Fig. 2). The observation that the entatiomers contribute a smaller fraction to the overall butanediol concentration than the meso compound is consistent with theoretical calculations suggesting that, due to stronger hydrogen bonding in the intermediate alkoxy enantiomer complex, the meso compound has a faster hydrogen shift rate than the enantiomer pair.44 In contrast, multiple peaks are not observed at the masses associated with B-ROOH and B-ROOR. Some of these chromatograms exhibit a larger peak width than other compounds that elute at similar temperatures (Table S8), suggesting that this is likely due to a lack of chromatographic separation.
As in the analysis of the 2-methylpropene system, high HO2 experiments
were performed with a mixture of ethene and cis-2-butene to directly compare the formation rates of the accretion products. The distribution of the stereosiomers of butanediol does not change (within error) under this condition, with an average distribution of the enantiomers to the meso compound of 31(±6)%/69(±6)%. Without chromatographic separation of the stereoisomers of B-ROOH, it is difficult to draw any definitive conclusions from this observation of the butanediol isomeric distribution. In these experiments, accretion products formed in the cross reactions between the ethene- and cis-2-butene-derived peroxy radicals (m/z 235) were observed alongside accretion products resulting from the corresponding self-reactions (m/z 263), as shown in Fig. 2c and d, respectively. The measured formation rate coefficients of these compounds is discussed in the section on ROOR formation rates.
the distribution of the ROOH isomers (that derived from the primary peroxy radical, pP-ROOH, and that derived from the secondary peroxy radical, sP-ROOH) is expected to match that of the relative formation rates of pP and sP. This is consistent with the measured isomer distribution in the high HO2 experiment, with an observed distribution of 35%/65% for pP-ROOH/sP-ROOH (Fig. 3c), which is within 5% of the distribution measured in Teng et al. (40(±3)%/60(±3)% for pP-ROOH/sP-ROOH).42
This distribution diverges from the relative production rates of the peroxy radical isomers in experiments with high RO2/HO2 ratios
, exhibiting a distribution of 16%/84% for pP-ROOH/sP-ROOH (Fig. 3a). The change in the distribution demonstrates, as expected, that pP undergoes self- and cross-reaction more quickly than sP. However, the perturbation is smaller than that observed for the distribution of pMP-ROOH and tMP-ROOH, suggesting that the difference in self- and cross-reaction rates between the tertiary and primary peroxy radicals is larger than that between the secondary and primary peroxy radicals. This is consistent with previous observations that the reactivity with respect to self- and cross-reaction decreases with increasing peroxy radical substitution.
As in the methylpropene oxidation system, the isomer distribution of the propene-derived accretion products (p,p-P-ROOR, p,s-P-ROOR, and s,s-P-ROOR) is influenced by the competing effects of the peroxy radical distribution and the self- and cross-reaction rate coefficients. However, the differences in these quantities across the peroxy radical isomers are smaller in the propene system than in the 2-methylpropene system. In experiments with high RO2/HO2 ratios, the accretion product formed in the cross-reaction of the primary and secondary peroxy radicals is most prominent, and is present in an average proportion of 56% (Fig. 3b). On the other hand, the p,p-P-ROOR and s,s-P-ROOR compounds are present in similar proportions, with an average distribution of 26%/18% for p,p-P-ROOR/s,s-P-ROOR.
In the high HO2 system, the proportion of the total ROOR signal that is composed of s,s-P-ROOR decreases to 11(±2)% on average. This is an effect similar to that observed in the high HO2 regime of the 2-methylpropene system, in which the fraction of t,t-MP-ROOR dramatically decreases due to the reaction of tMP with ethene-derived peroxy radicals. This suggests that sP also preferentially reacts with ethene-derived peroxy radicals over reaction with pP or sP, although this difference between reactivity in the cross-reaction versus the self-reaction is less pronounced than that observed for the tertiary peroxy radical. Further, two peaks are observed at the mass of an accretion product formed in the cross-reaction of ethene-derived peroxy radicals and propene-derived peroxy radicals (m/z 221). These are produced with an average distribution of 63%/37%. We assign the more prominent peak to pP,E-ROOR (the accretion product formed in the self-reaction of pP with ethene-derived peroxy radicals). The production rates of these and other products are quantified and discussed further in the next section. Similarly to the cis-2-butene system, we expect ROOR compounds from combinations of propene-derived RO2 to be composed of several stereoisomers, as each contains two chiral centers. However, we only observe a single peak for each structural isomer, which may indicate our inability to separate these species.
| Reactants | Typeh | k2α2d (×10−13) cm3 molec−1 s−1 | k2,meas (×10−13) cm3 molec−1 s−1 | k2,arg (×10−13) cm3 molec−1 s−1 | Implied α2d |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| a All values in this row are from Murphy et al. 2023.25b Jenkin and Hayman 1995.5 The value reported in Jenkin and Hayman is given as a range of possible values between 3.9 × 10−13 cm3 molec−1 s−1 and 6.0 × 10−13 cm3 molec−1 s−1. A value in the middle of this range is reported here and used to estimate α.c Boyd et al. 1996.6d Boyd et al. 2003.45e Value estimated using measured self-reaction rate coefficient for ethene-derived hydroxy peroxy radicals.f Value estimated using the measured self-reaction rate coefficient for cis-2-butene-derived hydroxy peroxy radicals.g Cross-reaction rate coefficients calculated using the arithmetic mean of measured or estimated k2 values.h Substitution of the participating peroxy radicals, where p = primary, s = secondary, and t = tertiary RO2. | |||||
| Ethene | |||||
![]() |
p + p | 5.5(±2.6)a | 24(±10) | 0.23(±0.05) | |
![]() |
|||||
| Propene | |||||
![]() |
p + p | 4.8 | 24e | 0.20 | |
![]() |
s + s | 0.35 | 5.0f | 0.07 | |
![]() |
s + p | 2.6 | 15 | 0.17 | |
![]() |
p + p | 8.0 | 24 | 0.33 | |
![]() |
s + p | 2.5 | 15 | 0.17 | |
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| Cis-2-butene | |||||
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s + s | 0.19 | 5.0(±1.1)b | 0.04(±0.03) | |
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s + p | 1.5 | 15(±8) | 0.10(±0.05) | |
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| 2-Methylpropene | |||||
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p + p | 3.9 | 51(±34)c | 0.08(±0.06) | |
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t + t | 0.0080 | 0.15(±0.05)d | 0.05(±0.03) | |
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p + t | 0.79 | 26(±19.5) | 0.03(±0.02) | |
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p + p | 12 | 38(±30) | 0.32(±0.30) | |
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t + p | 0.54 | 12(±6.4) | 0.05(±0.04) | |
In Fig. 4, the measured k2α2d values for each of the self-reactions are plotted in circles as a function of the sum of the total number of heavy atoms in both of the participating peroxy radicals (C + O − 4) and color-coded by peroxy radical substitution. The formation rate coefficient of the accretion product in the self-reaction decreases by approximately one order of magnitude for each additional increase in peroxy radical substitution, with the formation of the ROOR being the fastest for primary peroxy radical self-reactions (on the order of 10−13 cm3 molecule−1 s−1) and the slowest for the tertiary peroxy radical self-reaction (on the order of 10−15 cm3 molecule−1 s−1). This observation is consistent with the general observation that the overall rate of the self-reaction decreases with increasing peroxy radical substitution7,11 and suggests that, at least for small alkene-derived hydroxy peroxy radicals, k2α2d depends primarily on peroxy radical substitution.
Of the systems studied here, the self-reaction rate coefficients for the reactions of the sB,5 pMP,6,46 and tMP peroxy radicals45 have been measured in prior studies. For these systems, we use the k2α2d measured in this work and the literature value for the rate coefficient (k2,meas in column 4 of Table 1) to estimate α2d, the branching fraction to the formation of the accretion product. These values are given in column 6 of Table 1. We can further estimate α2d for the propene-derived peroxy radical isomers using measured rate coefficients for peroxy radicals with similar structures – these estimates are given in Table 1 as well (this is discussed in more detail below). The estimated α2d values for C4 peroxy radical self-reactions, which encompass primary, secondary, and tertiary peroxy radicals, have significantly overlapping uncertainties. However, these values suggest that α2d decreases with increasing radical substitution. This trend is also observed for C3 peroxy radicals, but with only two points this trend is uncertain. Clearly, further studies are needed to explore the relationship between structure and α2d. The substitution trend observed here is opposite that reported in a recent study of small alkyl peroxy radicals, which suggests that the branching fraction to accretion product formation increases with increasing alkyl radical substitution.30 Future work should explore the relationship between peroxy radical functionalization and branching to accretion product formation.
Although k2 for the propene-derived peroxy radicals have not been measured to our knowledge, we estimate values for k2 for the self-reactions of pP and sP using those values measured for other peroxy radical systems with the same substitution. We assign a value of k2 for the self-reaction of pP approximately equal to that found for the ethene-derived peroxy radical self-reaction (k2 = 2.4 × 10−12 cm3 molec−1 s−1). For the self-reaction of sP, we assign a value of k2 equal to that found for the cis-2-butene peroxy radical self-reaction (k2 = 5.0 × 10−13 cm3 molec−1 s−1). This yields estimated branching fractions (α2d) of 0.20 for the self-reaction of pP and 0.07 for the self-reaction of sP using the k2α2d values measured here.
Fig. 5 shows that, for both the k2α2d values measured in this work and the total k2 values given in Jenkin et al., the cross-reaction rate coefficients correlate well with the arithmetic mean of the corresponding self-reaction rate coefficients (eqn (11)):
![]() | (11) |
This suggests that the arithmetic mean of the self-reaction rate coefficients is a reasonable estimate of the cross-reaction rate coefficients. There is a clear outlier in this trend, the cross-reaction of the tert-butylperoxy radical (t-C4H9O2) with the methyl peroxy radical (CH3O2). However, the recommended rate coefficient for this reaction is fairly uncertain (Δlog
k = 0.6), with only two reported measurements.31,47,48
Using the arithmetic mean of the measured/estimated rate coefficients for the self-reactions (k2,ar in column 5 of Table 1), we also estimate α2d for each of the cross reactions, and these estimated values are shown in Table 1. Similarly to the k2α2d values, these values tend to lie in between the α2d values of the corresponding self-reactions, with the notable exception of the self-reaction of pP with E, which has a significant implied α2d of 0.33.
Supplementary information: experimental and instrumental conditions, experimental results, sensitivities, and additional comments regarding procedures and conclusions presented in the main body. See DOI: https://doi.org/10.1039/d5ea00106d.
Footnote |
| † Currently at the University of California, Los Angeles. |
| This journal is © The Royal Society of Chemistry 2025 |