Photodissociation-phtoionization, mass spectrometry (PDPIWS) is used to probe the wutral dissociation chemistry of branched alkenes and dienes. Molecules are pbotodkociated with an ultraviolet laser and the resulting neutral fragments are subsequently photoionized with coherent vacuum ultraviolet ra
Unimolecular photochemistry ofn-alkenes studied by photodissociation-photoionization mass spectrometry
✍ Scribed by Scott E. Van Bramer; Philip L. Ross; Murray V. Johnston
- Book ID
- 103995725
- Publisher
- Elsevier Science
- Year
- 1993
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 800 KB
- Volume
- 4
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 1044-0305
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✦ Synopsis
The 193-nm unimolecular photochemistry of n-alkenes from C5 to C14 is studied by photodissociation-photoionization mass spectrometry (PDPI/MS). In PDPI/MS, a UV laser induces neutral unimolecular photodissociation. The resulting neutral fragments and any remaining parent molecules are then softly ionized with coherent vacuum UV radiation and mass analyzed. Photodissociation of n-alkenes is dominated by cleavage of the β C-C bond. Products of α- and γ-cleavage are typically less than 20% as abundant as the β-cleavage fragments. Secondary fragmentation of the primary products occurs both by neutral fragmentation during photodissociation and by ionic fragmentation during photoionization. The energetics of the neutral secondary reactions indicate that between 400 and 500 kJ/mol is consumed during photodissociation. The abundances of many secondary fragmentation products decrease with increasing molecular size. Because neutral fragmentation occurs without significant isomerization, PDPI/MS provides structural information that is not available from ionic fragmentation in conventional mass spectrometric experiments.
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