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1.
JACS Au ; 4(5): 1875-1882, 2024 May 27.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38818071

ABSTRACT

Organic peroxy radicals (ROO•) are key oxidants in a wide range of chemical systems such as living organisms, chemical synthesis and polymerization systems, combustion systems, the natural environment, and the Earth's atmosphere. Although surfaces are ubiquitous in all of these systems, the interactions of organic peroxy radicals with these surfaces have not been studied until today because of a lack of adequate detection techniques. In this work, the uptake and reaction of gas-phase organic peroxy radicals (CH3OO• and i-C3H7OO•) with solid surfaces was studied by monitoring each radical specifically and in real-time with mass spectrometry. Our results show that the uptake of organic peroxy radicals varies widely with the surface material. While their uptake by borosilicate glass and perfluoroalkoxy alkanes (PFA) was negligible, it was substantial with metals and even dominated over the gas-phase reactions with stainless steel and aluminum. The results also indicate that these uptakes are controlled by redox reactions at the surfaces for which the products were analyzed. Our results show that the reactions of organic peroxy radicals with metal surfaces have to be carefully considered in all the experimental investigations of these radicals as they could directly impact the kinetic and mechanistic knowledge derived from such studies.

2.
Phys Chem Chem Phys ; 25(11): 7772-7782, 2023 Mar 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36857663

ABSTRACT

Today, the reactions of gas-phase organic peroxy radicals (RO2) with unsaturated Volatile Organic Compounds (VOC) are expected to be negligible at room temperature and ignored in atmospheric chemistry. This assumption is based on combustion studies (T ≥ 360 K), which were the only experimental data available for these reactions until recently. These studies also reported epoxide formation as the only reaction channel. In this work, the products of the reactions of 1-pentylperoxy (C5H11O2) and methylperoxy (CH3O2) with 2,3-dimethyl-2-butene ("2,3DM2B") and isoprene were investigated at T = 300 ± 5 K with Proton Transfer Reaction Time-of-Flight Mass Spectrometry (PTR-ToF-MS) and Gas Chromatography/Electron Impact Mass Spectrometry. Unlike what was expected, the experiments showed no measurable formation of epoxide. However, RO2 + alkene was found to produce compounds retaining the alkene structure, such as 3-hydroxy-3-methyl-2-butanone (C5H10O2) with 2,3DM2B and 2-hydroxy-2-methyl-3-butenal (C5H8O2) and methyl vinyl ketone with isoprene, suggesting that these reactions proceed through another reaction pathway under atmospheric conditions. We propose that, instead of forming an epoxide, the alkyl radical produced by the addtion of RO2 onto the alkene reacts with oxygen, producing a peroxy radical. The corresponding mechanisms are consistent with the products observed in the experiments. This alternative pathway implies that, under atmospheric conditions, RO2 + alkene reactions are kinetically limited by the initial addition step and not by the epoxide formation proposed until now for combustion systems. Extrapolating the combustion data to room temperature thus underestimates the rate coefficients, which is consistent with those recently reported for these reactions at room temperature. While slow for many classes of RO2, these reactions could be non-negligible at room temperature for some functionalized RO2. They might thus need to be considered in laboratory studies using large alkene concentrations and in biogenically-dominated regions of the atmosphere.

3.
J Phys Chem A ; 123(11): 2178-2193, 2019 Mar 21.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30803230

ABSTRACT

Reactions of the methylidyne (CH) radical with ammonia (NH3), methylamine (CH3NH2), dimethylamine ((CH3)2NH), and trimethylamine ((CH3)3N) have been investigated under multiple collision conditions at 373 K and 4 Torr. The reaction products are detected by using soft photoionization coupled to orthogonal acceleration time-of-flight mass spectrometry at the Advanced Light Source (ALS) synchrotron. Kinetic traces are employed to discriminate between CH reaction products and products from secondary or slower reactions. Branching ratios for isomers produced at a given mass and formed by a single reaction are obtained by fitting the observed photoionization spectra to linear combinations of pure compound spectra. The reaction of the CH radical with ammonia is found to form mainly imine, HN═CH2, in line with an addition-elimination mechanism. The singly methyl-substituted imine is detected for the CH reactions with methylamine, dimethylamine, and trimethylamine. Dimethylimine isomers are formed by the reaction of CH with dimethylamine, while trimethylimine is formed by the CH reaction with trimethylamine. Overall, the temporal profiles of the products are not consistent with the formation of aminocarbene products in the reaction flow tube. In the case of the reactions with methylamine and dimethylamine, product formation is assigned to an addition-elimination mechanism similar to that proposed for the CH reaction with ammonia. However, this mechanism cannot explain the products detected by the reaction with trimethylamine. A C-H insertion pathway may become more probable as the number of methyl groups increases.

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