New light on the imbroglio surrounding the C 8 H + 6 isomers formed from ionized azulene and naphthalene using ion-molecule reactions.
Corentin RossiGiel MullerRoland ThissenClaire RomanzinChristian AlcarazSandesh GondarryPaul M MayerUgo JacovellaPublished in: Chemical science (2023)
Most polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs) can isomerize with internal energies near to or below the dissociation threshold. The C 10 H + 8 group of ions, made up of the naphthalene (Naph + ) and the azulene (Azu + ) radical cations, is a prototypical example. C 8 H + 6 isomers are important species in the growth kinetics and formation of complex organic molecules, and more generally fragments from larger PAHs, yet information about C 8 H + 6 structures is scarce and contradictory. Here, ion-molecule reactions were carried out and the tunable photoionization chemical monitoring technique was used to probe the C 8 H + 6 isomers formed upon C 2 H 2 -loss from Naph + and Azu + . The experimental findings were interpreted with the support of ab initio and kinetics calculations. To facilitate the interpretation of these data, chemical reactivity starting from phenylacetylene (PA) was studied. It was found that most of the C 8 H + 6 ions formed from C 10 H 8 , in a timescale of 40 μs, are PA + in the vicinity of the dissociation threshold. No evidence of the pentalene radical cation (PE + ) was observed and explanations to reconcile previous results are presented.
Keyphrases
- polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons
- aqueous solution
- quantum dots
- density functional theory
- ionic liquid
- water soluble
- electron transfer
- high resolution
- electronic health record
- molecular dynamics simulations
- healthcare
- machine learning
- living cells
- mass spectrometry
- risk assessment
- climate change
- monte carlo
- single molecule