The absolute rates of bromine atom loss in bromobenzene and deuterobromobenzene ions were measured as a function of the internal energy. The ions were prepared at selected energies by photoion photoelectron coincidence. The results were compared to the rates predicted by the statistical theory. The
Dissociation mechanisms of energy-selected chlorobutane ions: Experiment and theory
โ Scribed by M. A. Almoster Ferreira; B. J. Costa Cabral; M. C. Oliveira; T. Baer
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 1993
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 664 KB
- Volume
- 28
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 1076-5174
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โฆ Synopsis
The breakdown diagrams and photoionization efficiency curves of isomeric chlorobutane ions were obtained by energy-selected molecular ions with the photoelectron-photoion coincidence (PEPICO) technique. The loss of HCI from 1-and 2-chlorobutane molecular ions was found to be fast, and accurate dissociation onsets were determined from the crossover energy in the breakdown diagrams and appropriately corrected for the precursor thermal energy. In spite of the low activation energy, the isochlorobutane molecular ion was found to dissociate slowly near the dissociation limit, the time-of-flight distributions having been analyzed in terms of two exponential decay rates. The dissociation reaction involved a large kinetic energy release that pointed to a 1,2-elimination leading to a stable C,HJ' ion. Ab initio calculations indicated that the reaction path involved an H-atom transfer through a barrier, which is a favorable case for a tunneling model to explain the slow decomposition rate. The kinetic energy release of chlorine radical loss from tert-chlorobutane was determined as a function of the ion internal energy. At low energies the kinetic energy release was nearly statistical but the dissociation from the excited electronic states resulted in a large and non-statistical kinetic energy release.
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## Abstract The coupling of the constitutive expression for the electrostatic potential as specified through Poisson's equation together with the constitutive equations for the mechanisms of convection, diffusion, electrophoretic migration, and adsorption provides the necessary set of constitutive