Time-Resolved Kinetic Chirped-Pulse Rotational Spectroscopy in a Room-Temperature Flow Reactor.
Daniel P ZaleskiLawrence B HardingStephen J KlippensteinBranko RuscicKirill ProzumentPublished in: The journal of physical chemistry letters (2017)
Chirped-pulse Fourier transform millimeter-wave spectroscopy is a potentially powerful tool for studying chemical reaction dynamics and kinetics. Branching ratios of multiple reaction products and intermediates can be measured with unprecedented chemical specificity; molecular isomers, conformers, and vibrational states have distinct rotational spectra. Here we demonstrate chirped-pulse spectroscopy of vinyl cyanide photoproducts in a flow tube reactor at ambient temperature of 295 K and pressures of 1-10 μbar. This in situ and time-resolved experiment illustrates the utility of this novel approach to investigating chemical reaction dynamics and kinetics. Following 193 nm photodissociation of CH2CHCN, we observe rotational relaxation of energized HCN, HNC, and HCCCN photoproducts with 10 μs time resolution and sample the vibrational population distribution of HCCCN. The experimental branching ratio HCN/HCCCN is compared with a model based on RRKM theory using high-level ab initio calculations, which were in turn validated by comparisons to Active Thermochemical Tables enthalpies.
Keyphrases
- single molecule
- room temperature
- density functional theory
- blood pressure
- molecular dynamics simulations
- high resolution
- living cells
- wastewater treatment
- molecular dynamics
- solid state
- ionic liquid
- fluorescent probe
- air pollution
- particulate matter
- anaerobic digestion
- energy transfer
- sensitive detection
- photodynamic therapy