Diphenol radical cations and semiquinone radicals as direct products of the free electron transfer from catechol, resorcinol and hydroquinone to parent solvent radical cations
Abstract
In the pulse radiolysis of solutions of catechol, resorcinol and hydroquinone in n-butylchloride, dihydroxybenzene radical cations (40%) as well as semiquinone radicals (60%) are observed as direct synchronously formed products of the electron transfer from the solvent parent ions to the solute. This is explained in terms of free electron transfer succeeding in nearly every encounter of the reactants, which in the case of the studied dihydroxybenzenes involves femtosecond molecular dynamics effects. The rotation of the C–OH bond causes cycling of the molecule through transient conformations also exhibiting different electron distributions. From the more chemical point of view, the diphenol radical cations represent the first and till now unknown intermediates of oxidative semiquinone radical formation.