Synthesis, Electronic Spectroscopy, and Photochemistry of Methacrolein Oxide: A Four-Carbon Unsaturated Criegee Intermediate from Isoprene Ozonolysis
Author(s) -
Michael F. Vansco,
Barbara Marchetti,
Nisalak Trongsiriwat,
Trisha Bhagde,
Guanghan Wang,
Patrick J. Walsh,
Stephen J. Klippenstein,
Marsha I. Lester
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
journal of the american chemical society
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 7.115
H-Index - 612
eISSN - 1520-5126
pISSN - 0002-7863
DOI - 10.1021/jacs.9b05193
Subject(s) - methacrolein , chemistry , photochemistry , isoprene , hydroperoxyl , oxide , ozonolysis , intersystem crossing , spectroscopy , radical , excited state , organic chemistry , atomic physics , singlet state , physics , monomer , quantum mechanics , copolymer , methacrylic acid , polymer
Ozonolysis of isoprene, one of the most abundant volatile organic compounds in the earth's atmosphere, generates the four-carbon unsaturated methacrolein oxide (MACR-oxide) Criegee intermediate. The first laboratory synthesis and direct detection of MACR-oxide is achieved through reaction of photolytically generated, resonance-stabilized iodoalkene radicals with oxygen. MACR-oxide is characterized on its first π* ← π electronic transition using a ground-state depletion method. MACR-oxide exhibits a broad UV-visible spectrum peaked at 380 nm with weak oscillatory structure at long wavelengths ascribed to vibrational resonances. Complementary theory predicts two strong π* ← π transitions arising from extended conjugation across MACR-oxide with overlapping contributions from its four conformers. Electronic promotion to the 1 1 ππ* state agrees well with experiment, and results in nonadiabatic coupling and prompt release of O 1 D products observed as anisotropic velocity-map images. This UV-visible detection scheme will enable study of its unimolecular and bimolecular reactions under thermal conditions of relevance to the atmosphere.
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