Issue 8, 2018

Isomer-specific detection in the UV photodissociation of the propargyl radical by chirped-pulse mm-wave spectroscopy in a pulsed quasi-uniform flow

Abstract

Isomer-specific detection and product branching fractions in the UV photodissociation of the propargyl radical is achieved through the use of chirped-pulse Fourier-transform mm-wave spectroscopy in a pulsed quasi-uniform flow (CPUF). Propargyl radicals are produced in the 193 nm photodissociation of 1,2-butadiene. Absorption of a second photon leads to H atom elimination giving three possible C3H2 isomers: singlets cyclopropenylidene (c-C3H2) and propadienylidene (l-C3H2), and triplet propargylene (3HCCCH). The singlet products and their appearance kinetics in the flow are directly determined by rotational spectroscopy, but due to the negligible dipole moment of propargylene, it is not directly monitored. However, we exploit the time-dependent kinetics of H-atom catalyzed isomerization to infer the branching to propargylene as well. We obtain the overall branching among H loss channels to be 2.9% (+1.1/−0.5) l-C3H2 + H, 16.8% (+3.2/−1.3) c-C3H2 + H, and 80.2 (+1.8/−4.2) 3HCCCH + H. Our findings are qualitatively consistent with earlier RRKM calculations in that the major channel in the photodissociation of the propargyl radical at 193 nm is to 3HCCCH + H; however, a greater contribution to the energetically most favorable isomer, c-C3H2 + H is observed in this work. We do not detect the predicted HCCC + H2 channel, but place an upper bound on its yield of 1%.

Graphical abstract: Isomer-specific detection in the UV photodissociation of the propargyl radical by chirped-pulse mm-wave spectroscopy in a pulsed quasi-uniform flow

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
12 sept. 2017
Accepted
13 nov. 2017
First published
13 nov. 2017

Phys. Chem. Chem. Phys., 2018,20, 5517-5529

Isomer-specific detection in the UV photodissociation of the propargyl radical by chirped-pulse mm-wave spectroscopy in a pulsed quasi-uniform flow

B. M. Broderick, N. Suas-David, N. Dias and A. G. Suits, Phys. Chem. Chem. Phys., 2018, 20, 5517 DOI: 10.1039/C7CP06211G

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