Identification of the acetaldehyde oxide Criegee intermediate reaction network in the ozone-assisted low-temperature oxidation of trans-2-butene
Author(s) -
Alan R. Conrad,
Nils Hansen,
Ahren W. Jasper,
Natasha K. Thomason,
Laura Hidaldo-Rodrigues,
Sean P. Treshock,
Denisia M. PopolanVaida
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
physical chemistry chemical physics
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.053
H-Index - 239
eISSN - 1463-9084
pISSN - 1463-9076
DOI - 10.1039/d1cp03126k
Subject(s) - chemistry , isomerization , photochemistry , ozonolysis , reactivity (psychology) , acetaldehyde , photoionization , methacrolein , formic acid , radical , reaction intermediate , isoprene , analytical chemistry (journal) , organic chemistry , ionization , polymerization , catalysis , ethanol , ion , medicine , polymer , alternative medicine , pathology , methacrylic acid , copolymer
Uni- and bi-molecular reactions involving Criegee intermediates (CIs) have been the focus of many studies due to the role these molecules play in atmospheric chemistry. The reactivity of CIs is known to strongly depend on their structure. The reaction network of the second simplest CI, acetaldehyde oxide (CH 3 CHOO), is investigated in this work in an atmospheric pressure jet-stirred reactor (JSR) during the ozonolysis of rans -2-butene to explore the kinetic pathways relevant to atmospheric chemistry and low-temperature combustion. The mole fraction profiles of reactants, intermediates, and final products are determined by means of molecular-beam mass spectrometry in conjunction with single-photon ionization employing tunable synchrotron-generated vacuum ultraviolet radiation. A network of CI reactions is identified in the temperature region below 600 K, characterized by CI addition to rans -2-butene, water, formaldehyde, formic acid, and methanol. No sequential additions of the CH 3 CHOO CI are observed, in contrast with the reactivity of the simplest CI (H 2 COO) and the earlier observation of an extensive reaction network with up to four H 2 COO sequential additions ( Phys. Chem. Chem. Phys. , 2019, 21 , 7341-7357). Experimental photoionization efficiency scans recorded at 300 K and 425 K and ab initio hreshold energy calculations lead to the identification and quantification of previously elusive intermediates, such as ketohydroperoxide and hydroperoxide species. Specifically, the C 4 H 8 + O 3 adduct is identified as a ketohydroperoxide (KHP, 3-hydroperoxybutan-2-one, CH 3 C(O)CH(CH 3 )OOH), while hydroxyacetaldehyde (glycolaldehyde, HCOCH 2 OH) formation is attributed to unimolecular isomerization of the CIs. Other hydroperoxide species such as methyl hydroperoxide (CH 3 OOH), ethyl hydroperoxide (C 2 H 5 OOH), butyl hydroperoxide (OOH), hydroperoxyl acetaldehyde (HOOCH 2 CHO), hydroxyethyl hydroperoxide (CH 3 CH(OH)OOH), but-1-enyl-3-hydroperoxide, and 4-hydroxy-3-methylpentan-2-one (HOCH(CH 3 )CH(CH 3 )C(O)CH 3 ) are also identified. Detection of additional oxygenated species such as methanol, ethanol, ketene, and aldehydes suggests multiple active oxidation routes. These results provide additional evidence that CIs are key intermediates of the ozone-unsaturated hydrocarbon reactions providing critical inputs for improved kinetics models.
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