Communication: Real time observation of unimolecular decay of Criegee intermediates to OH radical products

Y. Q. Fang(University of Pennsylvania), Fang Liu(University of Pennsylvania), Victoria P. Barber(University of Pennsylvania), Stephen J. Klippenstein(Argonne National Laboratory), Anne B. McCoy(University of Washington), Marsha I. Lester(University of Pennsylvania)
The Journal of Chemical Physics
February 10, 2016
Cited by 119Open Access
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Abstract

In the atmosphere, a dominant loss process for carbonyl oxide intermediates produced from alkene ozonolysis is also an important source of hydroxyl radicals. The rate of appearance of OH radicals is revealed through direct time-domain measurements following vibrational activation of prototypical methyl-substituted Criegee intermediates under collision-free conditions. Complementary theoretical calculations predict the unimolecular decay rate for the Criegee intermediates in the vicinity of the barrier for 1,4 hydrogen transfer that leads to OH products. Both experiment and theory yield unimolecular decay rates of ca. 10(8) and 10(7) s(-1) for syn-CH3CHOO and (CH3)2COO, respectively, at energies near the barrier. Tunneling through the barrier, computed from high level electronic structure theory and experimentally validated, makes a significant contribution to the decay rate. Extension to thermally averaged unimolecular decay of stabilized Criegee intermediates under atmospheric conditions yields rates that are six orders of magnitude slower than those evaluated directly in the barrier region.


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