Picosecond pulse radiolysis study on the distance dependent reaction of the solvated electron with organic molecules in ethylene glycol

El Omar, AK; Schmidhammer, U; Pernot, P; Murata, S; Mostafavi, M

HERO ID

1526235

Reference Type

Journal Article

Year

2012

Language

English

PMID

23151011

HERO ID 1526235
In Press No
Year 2012
Title Picosecond pulse radiolysis study on the distance dependent reaction of the solvated electron with organic molecules in ethylene glycol
Authors El Omar, AK; Schmidhammer, U; Pernot, P; Murata, S; Mostafavi, M
Journal Journal of Physical Chemistry A
Volume 116
Issue 49
Page Numbers 11989-11996
Abstract The decay of solvated electron e(s)(-) is observed by nanosecond and picosecond pulsed radiolysis, in diluted and highly concentrated solutions of dichloromethane, CH(2)Cl(2), trichloromethane, CHCl(3), tribromomethane, CHBr(3), acetone, CH(3)COCH(3), and nitromethane, CH(3)NO(2), prepared in ethylene glycol. First, second-order rate constants for the reactions between e(-)(s) and the organic scavengers have been determined. The ratio between the highest rate constant that was found for CH(3)NO(2) and the lowest one that was found for acetone is 3. This difference in reactivity cannot be explained by the change of viscosity or the size of the molecules. Then, from the analysis of decay kinetics obtained using ultrafast pulse-probe method, the distance dependent first-order rate constant of electron transfer for each scavenger has been determined. The amplitude of the transient effect observed on the picosecond time scale differs strongly between these solvated electron scavengers. For an identical scavenger concentration, the transient effect lasts ≈650 ps for CH(3)NO(2) compared to ~200 ps for acetone. For acetone, the distance dependent first-order rate constant of electron transfer is decreasing very rapidly with increasing distance, whereas for nitromethane and tribromomethane the rate constant is decreasing gradually with the distance and its value remains non-negligible even at ~10 Å. This rate constant is controlled mostly by the free energy of the reaction. For nitromethane and tribromomethane, the driving force is great, and the reaction can occur even at long distance, whereas for acetone the driving force is small and the reaction occurs almost at the contact distance. For nitromethane and acetone, the one-electron reduction reaction needs less internal reorganization energy than for alkyl halide compounds for which the reaction occurs in concert with bond breaking and geometric adjustment.
Doi 10.1021/jp308387s
Pmid 23151011
Wosid WOS:000312175900001
Url <Go to ISI>://WOS:000312175900001
Is Certified Translation No
Dupe Override No
Comments Source: Web of Science WOS:000312175900001
Is Public Yes
Language Text English