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Laser photolysis studies of hydrazine vapor: 193 and 222-nm H-atom primary quantum yields at 296 K, and the kinetics of H + N2H4 reaction over the temperature range 222–657 K

✍ Scribed by Ghanshyam L. Vaghjiani


Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
1995
Tongue
English
Weight
979 KB
Volume
27
Category
Article
ISSN
0538-8066

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✦ Synopsis


Abstract

The primary quantum yield of H‐atom production in the pulsed‐laser photolysis of hydrazine vapor, N~2~H~4~ + hν → H + N~2~H~3~, was measured to be (1.01 ± 0.12) at 193 nm relative to HBr photolysis, and (1.06 ± 0.16) at 222 nm relative to 248‐nm N~2~H~4~ photolysis, in excess He buffer gas at 296 K. The H‐atoms were directly monitored in the photolysis by cw‐resonance fluorescence detection of H(^2^S) at 121.6 nm. The high H‐atom yield observed in the photolysis is consistent with the continuous ultraviolet absorption spectrum of N~2~H~4~ involving unit dissociation of the diamine from repulsive excited singlet state(s). The laser photodissociation of N~2~H~4~ was thus used as a ‘clean’ source of H‐atoms in excess N~2~H~4~ and He buffer gas to study the gas‐phase reaction, H + N~2~H~4~ → products; (k~1~), in a thermostated photolysis reactor made of quartz or Pyrex. The pseudo‐first‐order temporal profiles of [H] decay immediately after photolysis were determined for a range of different hydrazine concentrations employed in the experiments to calculate the absolute second‐order reaction rate coefficient, k~1~. The Arrhenius expression was determined to be k~1~ = (11.7 ± 0.7) × 10^−12^ exp[−(1260 ± 20)/T] cm^3^ molec^−1^ s^−1^ in the temperature range 222–657 K. The rate coefficient at room temperature was, within experimental errors, independent of the He buffer gas pressure in the range 24.5–603 torr. The above temperature dependence of k~1~ is in excellent agreement to that we determine in our discharge flow‐tube apparatus in the temperature range 372–252 K and in 9.5 torr of He pressure. The Arrhenius parameters we report are consistent with a metathesis reaction mechanism involving the abstraction of hydrogen from N~2~H~4~ by the H‐atom. © 1995 John Wiley & Sons, Inc.