| Literature DB >> 36175514 |
Pedro Recio1, Silvia Alessandrini2,3, Gianmarco Vanuzzo1, Giacomo Pannacci1, Alberto Baggioli4, Demian Marchione1, Adriana Caracciolo1,5, Vanessa J Murray1,6, Piergiorgio Casavecchia1, Nadia Balucani7, Carlo Cavallotti8, Cristina Puzzarini9, Vincenzo Barone10.
Abstract
Two quantum effects can enable reactions to take place at energies below the barrier separating reactants from products: tunnelling and intersystem crossing between coupled potential energy surfaces. Here we show that intersystem crossing in the region between the pre-reactive complex and the reaction barrier can control the rate of bimolecular reactions for weakly coupled potential energy surfaces, even in the absence of heavy atoms. For O(3P) plus pyridine, a reaction relevant to combustion, astrochemistry and biochemistry, crossed-beam experiments indicate that the dominant products are pyrrole and CO, obtained through a spin-forbidden ring-contraction mechanism. The experimental findings are interpreted-by high-level quantum-chemical calculations and statistical non-adiabatic computations of branching fractions-in terms of an efficient intersystem crossing occurring before the high entrance barrier for O-atom addition to the N-atom lone pair. At low to moderate temperatures, the computed reaction rates prove to be dominated by intersystem crossing.Entities:
Year: 2022 PMID: 36175514 DOI: 10.1038/s41557-022-01047-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nat Chem ISSN: 1755-4330 Impact factor: 24.274