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Facile rearrangement of 3-oxoalkyl radicals is evident in low-temperature gas-phase oxidation of ketones

Journal of the American Chemical Society

Scheer, Adam M.; Welz, Oliver W.; Sasaki, Darryl Y.; Osborn, David L.; Taatjes, Craig A.

The pulsed photolytic chlorine-initiated oxidation of methyl-tert-butyl ketone (MTbuK), di-tert-butyl ketone (DTbuK), and a series of partially deuterated diethyl ketones (DEK) is studied in the gas phase at 8 Torr and 550-650 K. Products are monitored as a function of reaction time, mass, and photoionization energy using multiplexed photoionization mass spectrometry with tunable synchrotron ionizing radiation. The results establish that the primary 3-oxoalkyl radicals of those ketones, formed by abstraction of a hydrogen atom from the carbon atom in γ-position relative to the carbonyl oxygen, undergo a rapid rearrangement resulting in an effective 1,2-acyl group migration, similar to that in a Dowd-Beckwith ring expansion. Without this rearrangement, peroxy radicals derived from MTbuK and DTbuK cannot undergo HO2 elimination to yield a closed-shell unsaturated hydrocarbon coproduct. However, not only are these coproducts observed, but they represent the dominant oxidation channels of these ketones under the conditions of this study. For MTbuK and DTbuK, the rearrangement yields a more stable tertiary radical, which provides the thermodynamic driving force for this reaction. Even in the absence of such a driving force in the oxidation of partially deuterated DEK, the 1,2-acyl group migration is observed. Quantum chemical (CBS-QB3) calculations show the barrier for gas-phase rearrangement to be on the order of 10 kcal mol-1. The MTbuK oxidation experiments also show several minor channels, including β-scission of the initial radicals and cyclic ether formation. © 2013 American Chemical Society.

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Note: Absolute photoionization cross-section of the vinyl radical

Journal of Chemical Physics

Savee, John D.; Lockyear, Jessica F.; Borkar, Sampada; Eskola, Arkke J.; Welz, Oliver W.; Taatjes, Craig A.; Osborn, David L.

This work measures the absolute photoionization cross-section of the vinyl radical (σvinyl(E)) between 8.1 and 11.0 eV. Two different methods were used to obtain absolute cross-section measurements: 193 nm photodissociation of methyl vinyl ketone (MVK) and 248 nm photodissociation of vinyl iodide (VI). The values of the photoionization cross-section for the vinyl radical using MVK, σvinyl(10.224 eV) = (6.1 ± 1.4) Mb and σvinyl(10.424 eV) = (8.3 ± 1.9) Mb, and using VI, σvinyl(10.013 eV) = (4.7 ± 1.1) Mb, σ vinyl(10.513 eV) = (9.0 ± 2.1) Mb, and σ vinyl(10.813 eV) = (12.1 ± 2.9) Mb, define a photoionization cross-section that is ∼1.7 times smaller than a previous determination of this value. © 2013 AIP Publishing LLC.

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Directly measuring reaction kinetics of QOOH-a crucial but elusive intermediate in hydrocarbon autoignition

Physical Chemistry Chemical Physics

Zador, Judit Z.; Huang, Haifeng H.; Welz, Oliver W.; Zetterberg, Johan; Osborn, David L.; Taatjes, Craig A.

Hydrocarbon autoignition has long been an area of intense fundamental chemical interest, and is a key technological process for emerging clean and efficient combustion strategies. Carbon-centered radicals containing an -OOH group, commonly denoted QOOH radicals, are produced by isomerization of the alkylperoxy radicals that are formed in the first stages of oxidation. These QOOH radicals are among the most critical species for modeling autoignition, as their reactions with O2 are responsible for chain branching below 1000 K. Despite their importance, no QOOH radicals have ever been observed by any means, and only computational and indirect experimental evidence has been available on their reactivity. Here, we directly produce a QOOH radical, 2-hydroperoxy-2-methylprop-1-yl, and experimentally determine rate coefficients for its unimolecular decomposition and its association reaction with O 2. The results are supported by high-level theoretical kinetics calculations. Our experimental strategy opens up a new avenue to study the chemistry of QOOH radicals in isolation. © 2013 the Owner Societies.

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Unconventional peroxy chemistry in alcohol oxidation: The water elimination pathway

Journal of Physical Chemistry Letters

Welz, Oliver W.; Klippenstein, Stephen J.; Harding, Lawrence B.; Taatjes, Craig A.; Zador, Judit Z.

Predictive simulation for designing efficient engines requires detailed modeling of combustion chemistry, for which the possibility of unknown pathways is a continual concern. Here, we characterize a low-lying water elimination pathway from key hydroperoxyalkyl (QOOH) radicals derived from alcohols. The corresponding saddle-point structure involves the interaction of radical and zwitterionic electronic states. This interaction presents extreme difficulties for electronic structure characterizations, but we demonstrate that these properties of this saddle point can be well captured by M06-2X and CCSD(T) methods. Experimental evidence for the existence and relevance of this pathway is shown in recently reported data on the low-temperature oxidation of isopentanol and isobutanol. In these systems, water elimination is a major pathway, and is likely ubiquitous in low-temperature alcohol oxidation. These findings will substantially alter current alcohol oxidation mechanisms. Moreover, the methods described will be useful for the more general phenomenon of interacting radical and zwitterionic states. © 2013 American Chemical Society.

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Results 1–25 of 55
Results 1–25 of 55