Photochemical Hydrogen Storage with Hexaazatrinaphthylene.
Olaf W MorawskiPawel GawrysJarosław SadłoAndrzej L SobolewskiPublished in: Chemphyschem : a European journal of chemical physics and physical chemistry (2022)
When irradiated with violet light, hexaazatrinaphthylene (HATN) extracts a hydrogen atom from an alcohol forming a long-living hydrogenated species. The apparent kinetic isotope effect for fluorescence decay time in deuterated methanol (1.56) indicates that the lowest singlet excited state of the molecule is a precursor for intermolecular hydrogen transfer. The photochemical hydrogenation occurs in several alcohols (methanol, ethanol, isopropanol) but not in water. Hydrogenated HATN can be detected optically by an absorption band at 1.78 eV as well as with EPR (electron paramagnetic resonance) and NMR techniques. Mass spectrometry of photoproducts reveal di-hydrogenated HATN structures along with methoxylated and methylated HATN molecules which are generated through the reaction with methoxy radicals (remnants from alcohol splitting). Experimental findings are consistent with the theoretical results which predicted that for the excited state of the HATN-solvent molecular complex, there exists a barrierless hydrogen transfer from methanol but a small barrier for the similar oxidation of water.
Keyphrases
- energy transfer
- electron transfer
- high resolution
- mass spectrometry
- visible light
- carbon dioxide
- magnetic resonance
- single molecule
- genome wide
- liquid chromatography
- magnetic resonance imaging
- molecular dynamics
- ionic liquid
- escherichia coli
- cystic fibrosis
- hydrogen peroxide
- diffusion weighted imaging
- high performance liquid chromatography
- solar cells
- solid state