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1.
Chem Sci ; 15(16): 6160-6167, 2024 Apr 24.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38665513

ABSTRACT

Organic hydroperoxides (ROOH) are ubiquitous in the atmospheric oxidation of volatile organic compounds (VOCs) as well as in low-temperature oxidation of hydrocarbon fuels. The present work focuses on a prototypical cyclic hydroperoxide, cyclohexyl hydroperoxide (CHHP). The overtone OH stretch (2νOH) spectrum of jet-cooled CHHP is recorded by IR multiphoton excitation with UV laser-induced fluorescence detection of the resulting OH products. A distinctive IR feature is observed at 7012.5 cm-1. Two conformers of CHHP are predicted to have similar stabilities (within 0.2 kcal mol-1) and overtone OH stretch transitions (2νOH), yet are separated by a significant interconversion barrier. The IR power dependence indicates that absorption of three or more IR photons is required for dissociation of CHHP to cyclohexoxy (RO) and OH radical products. Accompanying high-level single- and multi-reference electronic structure calculations quantitatively support the experimental results. Calculations are extended to a range of organic hydroperoxides to examine trends in bond dissociation energies associated with RO + OH formation and compared with prior theoretical results.

2.
J Phys Chem A ; 127(31): 6377-6384, 2023 Aug 10.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37523496

ABSTRACT

Hydrofluoroolefins (HFO) are fourth-generation refrigerants designed to function as efficient refrigerants with no ozone depletion potential and zero global warming potential. Despite extensive studies on their chemical and physical properties, the ground- and excited-state chemistry of their atmospheric oxidation products is less well understood. This study focuses on the ground- and excited-state chemistry of the simplest fluorinated Criegee intermediate (CI), fluoroformaldehyde oxide (HFCOO), which is the simplest fluorinated CI formed from the ozonolysis of HFOs. HFCOO contains syn- and anti-conformers, which have Boltzmann populations of, respectively, 87 and 13% at 298 K. For both conformers, the calculated ground-state reaction energy profiles associated with cyclization to form fluorodioxirane is lower than the equivalent unimolecular decay path in the simplest CI, H2COO, with anti-HFCOO returning a barrier height more than half of that of H2COO. The excited-state dynamics reveal that photoexcitation to the bright S2 state of syn-HFCOO and anti-HFCOO is expected to undergo a prompt O-O fission─with the former conformer expected to dissociate with an almost unity quantum yield and to form both O (1D) + HFCO (S0) and O (3P) + HFCO (T1) products. In contrast, photoexcitation of anti-HFCOO is expected to undergo an O-O bond fission with a non-unity quantum yield. The fraction of photoexcited anti-HFCOO that dissociates is predicted to exclusively form O (1D) + HFCO (S0) products, which is in sharp contrast to H2COO. The wider implications of our results are discussed from both physical and atmospheric chemistry perspectives.

3.
Phys Chem Chem Phys ; 25(10): 7453-7465, 2023 Mar 08.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36848133

ABSTRACT

The photodissociation dynamics of the dimethyl-substituted acetone oxide Criegee intermediate [(CH3)2COO] is characterized following electronic excitation to the bright 1ππ* state, which leads to O (1D) + acetone [(CH3)2CO, S0] products. The UV action spectrum of (CH3)2COO recorded with O (1D) detection under jet-cooled conditions is broad, unstructured, and essentially unchanged from the corresponding electronic absorption spectrum obtained using a UV-induced depletion method. This indicates that UV excitation of (CH3)2COO leads predominantly to the O (1D) product channel. A higher energy O (3P) + (CH3)2CO (T1) product channel is not observed, although it is energetically accessible. In addition, complementary MS-CASPT2 trajectory surface-hopping (TSH) simulations indicate minimal population leading to the O (3P) channel and non-unity overall probability for dissociation (within 100 fs). Velocity map imaging of the O (1D) products is utilized to reveal the total kinetic energy release (TKER) distribution upon photodissociation of (CH3)2COO at various UV excitation energies. Simulation of the TKER distributions is performed using a hybrid model that combines an impulsive model with a statistical component, the latter reflecting the longer-lived (>100 fs) trajectories identified in the TSH calculations. The impulsive model accounts for vibrational activation of (CH3)2CO arising from geometrical changes between the Criegee intermediate and the carbonyl product, indicating the importance of CO stretch, CCO bend, and CC stretch along with activation of hindered rotation and rock of the methyl groups in the (CH3)2CO product. Detailed comparison is also made with the TKER distribution arising from photodissociation dynamics of CH2OO upon UV excitation.

4.
Environ Pollut ; 321: 121138, 2023 Mar 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36702432

ABSTRACT

Per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances (PFAS) have drawn great attention due to their wide distribution in water bodies and toxicity to human beings. Adsorption is considered as an efficient treatment technique for meeting the increasingly stringent environmental and health standards for PFAS. This paper systematically reviewed the current approaches of PFAS adsorption using different adsorbents from drinking water as well as synthetic and real wastewater. Adsorbents with large mesopores and high specific surface area adsorb PFAS faster, their adsorption capacities are higher, and the adsorption process are usually more effective under low pH conditions. PFAS adsorption mechanisms mainly include electrostatic attraction, hydrophobic interaction, anion exchange, and ligand exchange. Various adsorbents show promising performances but challenges such as requirements of organic solvents in regeneration, low adsorption selectivity, and complicated adsorbent preparations should be addressed before large scale implementation. Moreover, the aid of decision-making tools including response surface methodology (RSM), techno-economic assessment (TEA), life cycle assessment (LCA), and multi criteria decision analysis (MCDA) were discussed for engineering applications. The use of these tools is highly recommended prior to scale-up to determine if the specific adsorption process is economically feasible and sustainable. This critical review presented insights into the most fundamental aspects of PFAS adsorption that would be helpful to the development of effective adsorbents for the removal of PFAS in future studies and provide opportunities for large-scale engineering applications.


Subject(s)
Fluorocarbons , Water Pollutants, Chemical , Water Purification , Humans , Water Pollutants, Chemical/analysis , Adsorption , Wastewater , Water
5.
Photochem Photobiol ; 99(1): 4-18, 2023 Jan.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35713380

ABSTRACT

Interest in Criegee intermediates (CIs), often termed carbonyl oxides, and their role in tropospheric chemistry has grown massively since the demonstration of laboratory-based routes to their formation and characterization in the gas phase. This article reviews current knowledge regarding the electronic spectroscopy of atmospherically relevant CIs like CH2 OO, CH3 CHOO, (CH3 )2 COO and larger CIs like methyl vinyl ketone oxide and methacrolein oxide that are formed in the ozonolysis of isoprene, and of selected conjugated carbene-derived CIs of interest in the synthetic chemistry community. Of the aforementioned atmospherically relevant CIs, all except CH2 OO and (CH3 )2 COO exist in different conformers which, under tropospheric conditions, can display strikingly different thermal loss rates via unimolecular and bimolecular processes. Calculated photolysis rates based on their absorption properties suggest that solar photolysis will rarely be a significant contributor to the total loss rate for any CI under tropospheric conditions. Nonetheless, there is ever-growing interest in the absorption cross sections and primary photochemistry of CIs following excitation to the strongly absorbing 1 ππ* state, and how this varies with CI, with conformer and with excitation wavelength. The later part of this review surveys the photochemical data reported to date, including a range of studies that demonstrate prompt photo-induced fission of the terminal O-O bond, and speculates about possible alternate decay processes that could occur following non-adiabatic coupling to, and dissociation from, highly internally excited levels of the electronic ground state of a CI.


Subject(s)
Oxides , Spectrum Analysis , Photochemistry
6.
Photochem Photobiol ; 99(4): 1072-1079, 2023.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36308469

ABSTRACT

Isoprene is the most abundant nonmethane volatile organic compound emitted into the troposphere by terrestrial vegetation. Reaction with ozone represents an important isoprene removal process from the troposphere and is a well-known source of Criegee intermediates (CIs), which are reactive carbonyl oxides. Three CIs, formaldehyde oxide (CH2 OO), methyl vinyl ketone oxide (MVK-oxide) and methacrolein oxide (MACR-oxide) are formed during isoprene ozonolysis. All three CIs contain strongly absorbing ππ* states, electronic excitation, which leads to dissociation to form aldehyde/ketone + oxygen products. Here, we compare the excited state chemistry of CH2 OO, MVK-oxide and MACR-oxide in order to ascertain how increasing molecular complexity affects their photodynamics. In CH2 OO, vertical excitation to the S2 state leads to prompt O-O bond fission with a unity quantum yield. Branching into both the O (1 D) + H2 CO (S0 ) and O (3 P) + H2 CO (T1 ) product channels is predicted, with 80% of trajectories dissociating to form the former product pair. Analogous vertical excitation of the lowest energy conformers of MVK-oxide and MACR-oxide also undergoes O-O bond fission to form O + MVK/MACR products-albeit with a nonunity quantum yield. In the latter case, ca. 10% and 25% of trajectories remain as the parent MVK-oxide and MACR-oxide molecules, respectively. Additionally, at most only 5% of the dissociating trajectories form O (3 P) + MVK/MACR (T1 ) products, with a greater fraction forming O (1 D) + MVK/MACR (S0 ) products (cf. CH2 OO). This latter observation coupled with the greater fraction of undissociated trajectories aligns with the bathochromic shift in the electronic absorption of the MACR-oxide and MVK-oxide (cf. CH2 OO). We discuss the implications of the results in a broader context, including those that are relevant to the atmosphere.

7.
J Phys Chem A ; 127(1): 203-215, 2023 Jan 12.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36574960

ABSTRACT

The 2-butenal oxide Criegee intermediate [(CH3CH═CH)CHOO], an isomer of the four-carbon unsaturated Criegee intermediates derived from isoprene ozonolysis, is characterized on its first π* ← π electronic transition and by the resultant dissociation dynamics to O (1D) + 2-butenal [(CH3CH═CH)CHO] products. The electronic spectrum of 2-butenal oxide under jet-cooled conditions is observed to be broad and unstructured with peak absorption at 373 nm, spanning to half maxima at 320 and 420 nm, and in good accord with the computed vertical excitation energies and absorption spectra obtained for its lowest energy conformers. The distribution of total kinetic energy released to products is ascertained through velocity map imaging of the O (1D) products. About half of the available energy, deduced from the theoretically computed asymptotic energy, is accommodated as internal excitation of the 2-butenal fragment. A reduced impulsive model is introduced to interpret the photodissociation dynamics, which accounts for the geometric changes between 2-butenal oxide and the 2-butenal fragment, and vibrational activation of associated modes in the 2-butenal product. Application of the reduced impulsive model to the photodissociation of isomeric methyl vinyl ketone oxide reveals greater internal activation of the methyl vinyl ketone product arising from methyl internal rotation and rock, which is distinctly different from the dissociation dynamics of 2-butenal oxide or methacrolein oxide.


Subject(s)
Oxides , Spectrum Analysis
8.
J Phys Chem A ; 126(36): 6236-6243, 2022 Sep 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36067494

ABSTRACT

Ab initio molecular dynamics studies of CH2OO molecules following excitation to the minimum-energy geometry of the strongly absorbing S2 (1ππ*) state reveal a much richer range of behaviors than just the prompt O-O bond fission, with unity quantum yield and retention of overall planarity, identified in previous vertical excitation studies from the ground (S0) state. Trajectories propagated for 100 fs from the minimum-energy region of the S2 state show a high surface hopping (nonadiabatic coupling) probability between the near-degenerate S2 and S1 (1nπ*) states at geometries close to the S2 minimum, which enables population transfer to the optically dark S1 state. Greater than 80% of the excited population undergoes O-O bond fission on the S2 or S1 potential energy surfaces (PESs) within the analysis period, mostly from nonplanar geometries wherein the CH2 moiety is twisted relative to the COO plane. Trajectory analysis also reveals recurrences in the O-O stretch coordinate, consistent with the resonance structure observed at the red end of the parent S2-S0 absorption spectrum, and a small propensity for out-of-plane motion after nonadiabatic coupling to the S1 PES that enables access to a conical intersection between the S1 and S0 states and cyclization to dioxirane products.

9.
Phys Chem Chem Phys ; 24(27): 16724-16731, 2022 Jul 13.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35770704

ABSTRACT

Criegee intermediates are amongst the most fascinating molecules in modern-day chemistry. They are highly reactive intermediates that find vital roles that range from atmospheric chemistry to organic synthesis. Their excited state chemistry is exotic and complicated, and a myriad of electronic states can contribute to their photodissociation dynamics. This article reports a multi-state direct dynamics (full-dimensional) study of the photoinduced fragmentation of the simplest Criegee intermediate, CH2OO, using state-of-the-art MS-CASPT2 trajectory surface hopping. Following vertical excitation to the strongly absorbing S2(1ππ*) state, internal conversion, and thus changes in the electronic state character of the separating O + CH2O fragments, is observed between parent electronic states at separations that, traditionally, might be viewed as the classically asymptotic region of the potential energy surface. We suggest that such long-range internal conversion may account for the unusual and non-intuitive total kinetic energy distribution in the O(1D) + CH2O(S0) products observed following photoexcitation of CH2OO. The present results also reveal the interplay between seven singlet electronic states and dissociation to yield the experimentally observed O(1D) + CH2O(S0) and O(3P) + CH2O(T1) products. The former (singlet) products are favored, with a branching ratio of ca. 80%, quantifying the hitherto unknown product branching ratios observed in velocity map imaging experiments. To the best of our knowledge, such long-range internal conversions that lead to changes in the electronic state character of the fragment pairs originating from a common parent - at classically asymptotic separations - have not been recognized hitherto in the case of a molecular photodissociation.

10.
J Phys Chem A ; 126(4): 485-496, 2022 Feb 03.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35049299

ABSTRACT

Criegee intermediates are important atmospheric oxidants, formed via the reaction of ozone with volatile alkenes emitted into the troposphere. Small Criegee intermediates (e.g., CH2OO and CH3CHOO) are highly reactive, and their removal via unimolecular decay or bimolecular chemistry dominates their atmospheric lifetimes. As the molecular complexity of Criegee intermediates increases, their electronic absorption spectra show a bathochromic shift within the solar spectrum relevant to the troposphere. In these cases, solar photolysis may become a competitive contributor to their atmospheric removal. In this article, we report the conformer-dependent simulated electronic absorption spectra of two four-carbon-centered Criegee intermediates, methyl vinyl ketone oxide (MVK-oxide) and methacrolein oxide (MACR-oxide). Both MVK-oxide and MACR-oxide contain four low-energy conformers, which are convoluted in the experimentally measured spectra. Here, we deconvolute each conformer and estimate contributions from each of the four conformers to the experimentally measured spectra. We also estimate the photolysis rates and predict that solar photolysis should be a more competitive removal process for MVK-oxide and MACR-oxide (cf. CH2OO and CH3CHOO).


Subject(s)
Electronics , Oxides , Acrolein/analogs & derivatives , Butanones , Photolysis
11.
J Colloid Interface Sci ; 612: 235-245, 2022 Apr 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34998187

ABSTRACT

Metal-organic frameworks (MOFs) and their derivatives have shown great potential as electrocatalysts, in virtue of their ease of functionalization and abundance of active sites. Here, we report a series of indium-doped bismuth MOF-derived composites (BiInX-Y@C) for the direct conversion of carbon dioxide (CO2) to hydrocarbon derivatives. Amongst the catalysts studied, BiIn5-500@C demonstrated high selectivity for the production of formate and intrinsic activity in a wide potential window, ranging from - 1.16 to - 0.76 V vs. RHE (VRHE). At - 0.86 VRHE, the Faradaic efficiency and total current density were determined as 97.5% and - 13.5 mA cm-2, respectively. In addition, a 15-h stability test shows no obvious signs of deactivation. Complementary density functional theory (DFT) calculations revealed that the In-doped Bi2O3 are the predominant active centers for HCOOH production in the reduction of CO2 under the action of the BiInX-Y@C catalyst. This work provides new detailed insights into reaction mechanism, and selectivity for reduction of CO2via MOFs, which are expected to inspire and guide the design of novel, selective and efficient catalysts.

12.
Photochem Photobiol ; 98(4): 763-772, 2022 07.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34767632

ABSTRACT

Criegee intermediates make up a class of molecules that are of significant atmospheric importance. Understanding their electronically excited states guides experimental detection and provides insight into whether solar photolysis plays a role in their removal from the troposphere. The latter is particularly important for large and functionalized Criegee intermediates. In this study, the excited state chemistry of two small Criegee intermediates, formaldehyde oxide (CH2 OO) and acetaldehyde oxide (CH3 CHOO), was modeled to compare their specific dynamics and mechanisms following excitation to the bright ππ* state and to assess the involvement of triplet states to the excited state decay process. Following excitation to the bright ππ* state, the photoexcited population exclusively evolves to form oxygen plus aldehyde products without the involvement of triplet states. This occurs despite the presence of a more thermodynamically stable triplet path and several singlet/triplet energy crossings at the Franck-Condon geometry and contrasts with the photodynamics of related systems such as acetaldehyde and acetone. This work sets the foundations to study Criegee intermediates with greater molecular complexity, wherein a bathochromic shift in the electron absorption profiles may ensure greater removal via solar photolysis.


Subject(s)
Electrons , Quantum Theory , Acetaldehyde , Oxides , Photolysis
13.
Phys Chem Chem Phys ; 24(1): 532-540, 2021 Dec 22.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34904596

ABSTRACT

Criegee intermediates are of great significance to Earth's troposphere - implicated in altering the tropospheric oxidation cycle and in forming low volatility products that typically condense to form secondary organic aerosols (SOAs). As such, their chemistry has attracted vast attention in recent years. In particular, the unimolecular decay of thermal and vibrationally-excited Criegee intermediates has been the focus of several experimental and computational studies, and it is now recognized that Criegee intermediates undergo unimolecular decay to form OH radicals. In this contribution we reveal insight into the chemistry of Criegee intermediates by highlighting the hitherto neglected multi-state contribution to the ground state unimolecular decay dynamics of the Criegee intermediate products. The two key intermediates of present focus are dioxirane and vinylhydroperoxide - known to be active intermediates that mediate the unimolecular decay of CH2OO and CH3CHOO, respectively. In both cases the unimolecular decay path encounters conical intersections, which may play a pivotal role in the ensuing dynamics. This hitherto unrecognized phenomenon may be vital in the way in which the reactivity of Criegee intermediates are modelled and is likely to affect the ensuing dynamics associated with the unimolecular decay of a given Criegee intermediate.

14.
J Chem Phys ; 155(17): 174305, 2021 Nov 07.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34742186

ABSTRACT

The electronic spectrum of methyl vinyl ketone oxide (MVK-oxide), a four-carbon Criegee intermediate derived from isoprene ozonolysis, is examined on its second π* ← π transition, involving primarily the vinyl group, at UV wavelengths (λ) below 300 nm. A broad and unstructured spectrum is obtained by a UV-induced ground state depletion method with photoionization detection on the parent mass (m/z 86). Electronic excitation of MVK-oxide results in dissociation to O (1D) products that are characterized using velocity map imaging. Electronic excitation of MVK-oxide on the first π* ← π transition associated primarily with the carbonyl oxide group at λ > 300 nm results in a prompt dissociation and yields broad total kinetic energy release (TKER) and anisotropic angular distributions for the O (1D) + methyl vinyl ketone products. By contrast, electronic excitation at λ ≤ 300 nm results in bimodal TKER and angular distributions, indicating two distinct dissociation pathways to O (1D) products. One pathway is analogous to that at λ > 300 nm, while the second pathway results in very low TKER and isotropic angular distributions indicative of internal conversion to the ground electronic state and statistical unimolecular dissociation.

15.
J Phys Chem A ; 125(30): 6571-6579, 2021 Aug 05.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34314179

ABSTRACT

UV excitation of the CH2OO Criegee intermediate across most of the broad span of the (B 1A')-(X 1A') spectrum results in prompt dissociation to two energetically accessible asymptotes: O (1D) + H2CO (X 1A1) and O (3P) + H2CO (a 3A''). Dissociation proceeds on multiple singlet potential energy surfaces that are coupled by two regions of conical intersection (CoIn). Velocity map imaging (VMI) studies reveal a bimodal total kinetic energy release (TKER) distribution for the O (1D) + H2CO (X 1A1) products with the major and minor components accounting for ca. 40% and ca. 20% on average of the available energy (Eavl), respectively. The unexpected low TKER component corresponds to highly internally excited H2CO (X 1A1) products accommodating ca. 80% of Eavl. Full dimensional trajectory calculations suggest that the bimodal TKER distribution of the O (1D) + H2CO (X 1A1) products originates from two different dynamical pathways: a primary pathway (69%) evolving through one CoIn region to products and a smaller component (20%) sampling both CoIn regions enroute to products. Those that access both CoIn regions likely give rise to the more highly internally excited H2CO (X 1A1) products. The remaining trajectories (11%) dissociate to O (3P) + H2CO (a 3A'') products after traversing through both CoIn regions. The complementary experimental and theoretical investigation provides insight on the photodissociation of CH2OO via multiple dissociation pathways through two regions of CoIn that control the branching and energy distributions of products.

16.
J Phys Chem A ; 125(19): 4089-4097, 2021 May 20.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33970629

ABSTRACT

Criegee intermediates (CIs) play a vital role in the atmosphere-known most prominently for enhancing the oxidizing capacity of the troposphere. Knowledge of their electronic absorption spectra is of vital importance for two reasons: (1) to aid experimentalists in detecting CIs and (2) in deciding if their removal is affected by solar photolysis. In this article we report a simple and efficient method based on the nuclear ensemble method that may be effectively used to compute the electronic absorption spectra of Criegee intermediates without the need for extensive computation of preparing the initial configurations of the starting geometry. We use this method to benchmark several excited-state electronic structure methods and their efficacy in reproducing the electronic absorption spectra of two well-known cases of CI: CH2OO and CH3CHOO. The success and computational feasibility of the methodology are crucial for its applicability to CIs of increasing molecular complexity, which have no known experimentally measured electronic absorption spectra, allowing a guide for experimentalists. Application of the methodology to more complex CIs (e.g., those with extended conjugation or those derived from endocyclic alkenes) will also reveal if solar photolysis becomes a competitive removal process when compared to unimolecular decay or bimolecular chemistry.

17.
J Phys Chem A ; 124(13): 2530-2536, 2020 Apr 02.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32149509

ABSTRACT

Treatment of homo- and heterocyclic aromatic substrates with basic deuterium oxide under near- or supercritical conditions results in rapid base-catalyzed hydrogen-deuterium exchange (HDE) in aromatic and benzylic positions. It has been postulated that HDE follows a simple deprotonation-reprotonation mechanism, but little evidence has been provided to date. This study correlates experimentally observed proton exchanges in n-butylbenzene with ab initio calculations of the acidities and potential energy (PE) profiles. In addition to providing further support for carbanion intermediacy in HDE, these results offer new insights into substrate acidities in near- and supercritical aqueous media and the optimal conditions required for their isotope exchange.

18.
Front Chem ; 8: 596590, 2020.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33425854

ABSTRACT

We present a contemporary mechanistic description of the light-driven conversion of cyclopropenone containing enediyne (CPE) precusors to ring-opened species amenable to further Bergman cyclization and formation of stable biradical species that have been proposed for use in light-induced cancer treatment. The transformation is rationalized in terms of (purely singlet state) Norrish type-I chemistry, wherein photoinduced opening of one C-C bond in the cyclopropenone ring facilitates non-adiabatic coupling to high levels of the ground state, subsequent loss of CO and Bergman cyclization of the enediyne intermediate to the cytotoxic target biradical species. Limited investigations of substituent effects on the ensuing photochemistry serve to vindicate the experimental choices of Popik and coworkers (J. Org. Chem., 2005, 70, 1297-1305). Specifically, replacing the phenyl moiety in the chosen model CPE by a 1,4-benzoquinone unit leads to a stronger, red-shifted parent absorption, and increases the exoergicity of the parent → biradical conversion.

19.
J Phys Chem A ; 124(3): 498-504, 2020 Jan 23.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31877042

ABSTRACT

Singlet oxygen (1O2) is a significant source of biodamage in living organisms. 1O2 is a highly reactive excited electronic-state spin-configuration of molecular oxygen and is usually prepared via organic molecule sensitization. Despite the wealth of experimental studies on the 1O2-induced oxidation of several bio-organic molecules, the detailed mechanism of the oxidation process is largely unknown. Using high-level quantum chemical methods, we compute the potential energy profiles of the various electronic states associated with the [4 + 2]-cycloaddition reaction of O2 with a class of model peptide precursors that are based on derivatives of oxazole and thiazole. Experiments have shown that such oxazole/thiazole-based model peptides show a favorable reaction with 1O2. Upon increasing the molecular complexity, the bimolecular rate constant decreases and is attributed to the π-perturbing effects of the substituent of the oxazole/thiazole moiety. Our theoretical predictions are in excellent agreement with the experimental measurements and reveal a deep insight into the myriad electronic states that may hinder/promote the reaction of a given bio-organic molecule with 1O2.

20.
Chem Sci ; 10(20): 5290-5298, 2019 May 28.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31191885

ABSTRACT

We illustrate a new, collision-free experimental strategy that allows determination of the absolute probabilities of rival bond fission processes in a photoexcited molecule - here t-butylmethylsulfide (BSM). The method combines single photon ('universal') ionization laser probe methods, simultaneous imaging of all probed fragments (multi-mass ion imaging) and the use of an appropriate internal calibrant (here dimethylsulfide). Image analysis allows quantification of the dynamics of the rival B-SM and BS-M bond fission processes following ultraviolet (UV) excitation of BSM and shows the former to be twice as probable, despite the only modest (∼2%) differences in the respective ground state equilibrium C-S bond lengths or bond strengths. Rationalising this finding should provide a stringent test of the two close-lying, coupled excited states of 1A'' symmetry accessed by UV excitation in BSM and related thioethers, of the respective transition dipole moment surfaces, and of the geometry dependent non-adiabatic couplings that enable the rival C-S bond fissions.

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