Literature DB >> 17867659

Femtosecond IR spectroscopy of peroxycarbonate photodecomposition: S1-lifetime determines decarboxylation rate.

Christian Reichardt1, Jörg Schroeder, Dirk Schwarzer.   

Abstract

The ultrafast photofragmentation of arylperoxycarbonates R-O-C(O)O-O-tert-butyl (R = naphthyl, phenyl) is studied using femtosecond UV excitation at 266 nm and mid-infrared broadband probe pulses to elucidate the dissociation mechanism. Our experiments show that the rate of fragmentation is determined by the S1-lifetime of the peroxide, i.e., the time constants of S1 decay and of CO2 and R-O* formation are identical. The fragmentation times are solvent dependent and for tert-butyl-2-naphthylperoxycarbonate (TBNC) vary from 25 ps in CH2Cl2 to 52 ps in n-heptane. In the case of the tert-butylphenylperoxycarbonate (TBPC) the decomposition takes 5.5 ps in CD2Cl2 and 12 ps in n-heptane. The CO2 fragment is formed vibrationally hot with an excess energy of about 5000 cm(-1). The hot CO2 spectra at high energy can be modeled assuming Boltzmann distributions with initial vibrational temperatures of ca. 2500 K which relax to ambient temperature with time constants of 280 ps in CCl4 and 130 ps in n-heptane. In CCl4 the relaxed spectra at 1.5 ns show 3.5% residual excitation in the n = 1 level of the asymmetric stretch vibration.

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Year:  2007        PMID: 17867659     DOI: 10.1021/jp0742968

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Phys Chem A        ISSN: 1089-5639            Impact factor:   2.781


  1 in total

1.  Picosecond to millisecond tracking of a photocatalytic decarboxylation reaction provides direct mechanistic insights.

Authors:  Aditi Bhattacherjee; Mahima Sneha; Luke Lewis-Borrell; Omri Tau; Ian P Clark; Andrew J Orr-Ewing
Journal:  Nat Commun       Date:  2019-11-13       Impact factor: 14.919

  1 in total

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