Photodissociation Dynamics of the Isocyanato Free Radical


Book Description

The 193-nm photolysis of the NCO radical has been investigated. NCO was generated from the reaction of CN + O2, where the CN was produced by 193-nm photolysis of C2N2 close to the nozzle of a pulsed jet. A second 193-nm photon dissociated the NCO radical during the same laser pulse. At this photon energy both the N-CO and the NC-O bonds may break. N(2D, 2P) and CO products have been detected using vacuum ultraviolet laser induced fluorescence. A direct measurement of the N(2D):N(2P) branching ratio yielded an upper limit of 72 +/- 18. The CO vibrational distribution was modeled with prior distributions for each of the contributing channels with co-products N(4S, 2D and 2P). Combination of the results from the prior model and the direct measurement yielded a branching ratio of N(4S): N(2D): N(2P) of (5.1 +/- 1.8):(93.6 +/- 4.8):(1.3 +/- 0.3). For the N(2D) + CO product channel, the average energy disposal into product relative translation (7%) and CO vibration (24%) was determined, leaving 69% of the available energy to appear as CO rotation. This observation suggests that the geometry of the dissociating state of NCO is likely to be bent.










Photoisomerization and Photodissociation Dynamics of Reactive Free Radicals


Book Description

The photofragmentation pathways of chemically reactive free radicals have been examined using the technique of fast beam photofragment translational spectroscopy. Measurements of the photodissociation cross-sections, product branching ratios, product state energy distributions, and angular distributions provide insight into the excited state potential energy surfaces and nonadiabatic processes involved in the dissociation mechanisms. Photodissociation spectroscopy and dynamics of the predissociative {tilde A}2A1 and {tilde B}2A2 states of CH3S have been investigated. At all photon energies, CH3 + S(3P{sub j}), was the main reaction channel. The translational energy distributions reveal resolved structure corresponding to vibrational excitation of the CH3 umbrella mode and the S(3P{sub j}) fine-structure distribution from which the nature of the coupled repulsive surfaces is inferred. Dissociation rates are deduced from the photofragment angular distributions, which depend intimately on the degree of vibrational excitation in the C-S stretch. Nitrogen combustion radicals, NCN, CNN and HNCN have also been studied. For all three radicals, the elimination of molecular nitrogen is the primary reaction channel. Excitation to linear excited triplet and singlet electronic states of the NCN radical generates resolved vibrational structure of the N2 photofragment. The relatively low fragment rotational excitation suggests dissociation via a symmetric C{sub 2V} transition state. Resolved vibrational structure of the N2 photofragment is also observed in the photodissociation of the HNCN radical. The fragment vibrational and rotational distributions broaden with increased excitation energy. Simple dissociation models suggest that the HNCN radical isomerizes to a cyclic intermediate (c-HCNN) which then dissociates via a tight cyclic transition state. In contrast to the radicals mentioned above, resolved vibrational structure was not observed for the ICNN radical due to extensive fragment rotational excitation, suggesting that intermediate bent states are strongly coupled along the dissociation pathway. The measurements performed in this Thesis have additionally refined the heats of formation and bond dissociation energies of these radicals and have unambiguously confirmed and added to the known electronic spectroscopy.
















Photodissociation Spectroscopy and Dynamics of Free Radicals, Clusters, and Ions


Book Description

The photodissociation spectroscopy and dynamics of free radicals and ions is studied to characterize the dissociative electronic states in these species. To accomplish this, a special method of radical production, based on the photodetachment of the corresponding negative ion, has been combined with the technique of fast beam photofragment translational spectroscopy. The photofragment yield as a function of photon energy is obtained, mapping out the dissociative and predissociative electronic states. Branching ratios to various product channels, the translational energy distributions of the fragments, and bond dissociation energies are then determined at selected photon energies. The detailed picture of photodissociation dynamics is provided with the aid of ab initio calculations and a statistical model to interpret the observed data. Important reaction intermediates in combustion reactions have been studied: CCO, C2H5O, and linear C{sub n} (n = 4--6).