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A: Kinetics, Dynamics, Photochemistry, and Excited States
Influence of Ether Functional Group on Ketohydroperoxide Formation in Cyclic Hydrocarbons: Tetrahydropyran and Cyclohexane Jacob C Davis, Alanna L Koritzke, Rebecca L. Caravan, Ivan O. Antonov, Matthew G Christianson, Anna C Doner, David L. Osborn, Leonid Sheps, Craig Allen Taatjes, and Brandon Rotavera J. Phys. Chem. A, Just Accepted Manuscript • DOI: 10.1021/acs.jpca.8b12510 • Publication Date (Web): 13 Mar 2019 Downloaded from http://pubs.acs.org on March 13, 2019
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The Journal of Physical Chemistry
Influence of Ether Functional Group on Ketohydroperoxide Formation in Cyclic Hydrocarbons: Tetrahydropyran and Cyclohexane Jacob C. Davis1, Alanna L. Koritzke2, Rebecca L. Caravan3, Ivan O. Antonov3, Matthew G. Christianson2, Anna C. Doner2, David L. Osborn3, Leonid Sheps3, Craig A. Taatjes3, and Brandon Rotavera1, 2 1College
of Engineering, University of Georgia, Athens, GA 30602 of Chemistry, University of Georgia, Athens, GA 30602 3Combustion Research Facility, Sandia National Laboratories, Livermore, CA 94551 2Department
11
Abstract
12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25
1. Introduction 2. Experimental and computational approach 2.1. Multiplexed photoionization mass spectrometry (MPIMS) measurements 2.2. Initial radical distribution from tetrahydropyran + Ċl reactions 2.3. ab initio calculations 3. Results 3.1. Ketohydroperoxides 3.2. -Q̇OOH ring-opening 3.2.1. pentanedial + ȮH 3.2.2. vinyl formate + ethene + ȮH 3.2.3. 3-butenal + formaldehyde + ȮH 4. Discussion 5. Conclusion 6. References
26 27
Corresponding author. University of Georgia, College of Engineering | Department of Chemistry, Athens, GA, 30602,
USA Tel: (706) 542-1801; Email:
[email protected].
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Abstract
2
Photolytically initiated oxidation experiments were conducted on cyclohexane and tetrahydropyran using
3
multiplexed photoionization mass spectrometry (MPIMS) to assess the impact of the ether functional group
4
in the latter species on reaction mechanisms relevant to autoignition. Pseudo-first-order conditions, with
5
[O2]0:[Ṙ]0 > 2000, were used to ensure that Ṙ + O2 → products were the dominant reactions. Quasi-
6
continuous, tunable vacuum ultraviolet light from a synchrotron was employed over the range 8.0 – 11.0
7
eV to measure photoionization spectra of the products at two pressures (10 Torr and 1520 Torr) and three
8
temperatures (500 K, 600 K, and 700 K).
9
Photoionization spectra of ketohydroperoxides were measured in both species and were qualitatively
10
identical, within the limit of experimental noise, to those of analogous species formed in n-butane oxidation.
11
However, differences were noted between the two species in the temperature dependence of
12
ketohydroperoxide formation. While the yield from cyclohexane is evident up to 700 K,
13
ketohydroperoxides in tetrahydropyran were not detected above 650 K. The difference indicates reaction
14
mechanisms change due to the ether group the likely affecting the requisite Q̇OOH + O2 addition step.
15
Branching fractions of nine species from tetrahydropyran were quantified with the objective of determining
16
the role of ring-opening reactions on diminished ketohydroperoxide. The results indicate that products
17
formed from unimolecular decomposition of Ṙ and Q̇OOH radicals via concerted C–C and C–O -scission
18
are pronounced in tetrahydropyran and are insignificant in cyclohexane oxidation. The main conclusion
19
drawn is that, under the conditions herein, ring-opening pathways reduce the already low steady-state
20
concentration of Q̇OOH, which in the case of tetrahydropyran prevents Q̇OOH + O2 reactions necessary
21
for ketohydroperoxide formation. Carbon balance calculations reveal that products from ring-opening of
22
both Ṙ and Q̇OOH, at 700 K, account for >70% at 10 Torr and >55% at 1520 Torr. Three pathways
23
confirmed that contribute to the depletion of Q̇OOH in tetrahydropyran include: (i) -Q̇OOH → pentanedial
24
+ ȮH, (ii) -Q̇OOH → vinyl formate + ethene + ȮH, (iii) -Q̇OOH → 3-butenal + formaldehyde + ȮH.
25
Analogous mechanisms in cyclohexane oxidation leading to similar intermediates are compared, and on the
26
basis of mass spectra results confirm that no such ring-opening reactions occur. The implication from the
27
comparison to cyclohexane is that the ether group in tetrahydropyran increases the propensity for ring-
28
opening reactions and inhibits the formation of ketohydroperoxide isomers that precede chain-branching.
29
On the contrary, the absence of such reactions in cyclohexane enable ketohydroperoxide formation up to
30
700 K and perhaps higher temperature.
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The Journal of Physical Chemistry
1
1. Introduction
2
Understanding fundamental chemical kinetics of cyclic ethers is important for two primary reasons. First,
3
as products of degenerate chain-branching mechanisms during low-temperature combustion of alkanes,
4
insight into the formation and decomposition of cyclic ethers play a central role in modeling autoignition
5
chemistry1-2. Second, owing to advances in catalysis and synthetic chemistry, several cyclic ethers including
6
tetrahydrofuran3-7,
7
dimethyltetrahydrofuran6-7, 10, 15-16, and tetrahydropyran17 may substantively contribute to next-generation
8
biofuel objectives. The latter species, tetrahydropyran, is a lignocellulosic-derived biofuel17 analogous to
9
cyclohexane by replacement of a methylene group (–CH2–) with an ether functional group (–O–). The
10
presence of the ether group creates three distinct abstraction sites, labeled , , and in Figure 1. Upon H-
11
abstraction, three distinct initial radicals are produced from tetrahydropyran (-tetrahydropyranyl, -
12
tetrahydropyranyl, and -tetrahydropyranyl), in contrast to cyclohexane for which only one distinct radical
13
is formed (cyclohexyl). The higher number of distinct initial radicals adds significant complexity to
14
understanding reaction mechanisms of tetrahydropyran due to the sheer increase in the number of reactions
15
and to the role of the ether functional group. Oxygen content in hydrocarbons is known to affect low-
16
temperature oxidation mechanisms and impacts autoignition chemistry as a result, e.g. in ethers
17
alcohols
18
dissociation energies on carbon sites adjacent to functional groups (i.e. carbon), which enables facile H-
19
abstraction 24-25.
20-21,
2-methyltetrahydrofuran3-14,
and esters
22-23.
3-methyltetrahydrofuran7,
9,
11,
2,5-
18-19,
Part of the influence of oxygen in biofuels is due to lower C–H bond
O
20 21
Figure 1. Molecular structures of cyclohexane and tetrahydropyran with H-abstraction sites labeled.
22
Autoignition in combustion systems at temperatures below 1000 K is initiated by the reaction of O2 with
23
an organic radical Ṙ formed via H-abstraction from the fuel (RH), primarily by ȮH 1. The next step in the
24
process is an isomerization reaction of the resultant peroxy radical ROȮ into a carbon-centered
25
hydroperoxy-substituted radical, Q̇OOH. The propensity of hydrocarbons to undergo low-temperature
26
chain-branching depends on the fate of Q̇OOH, specifically on the balance between inhibiting reactions,
27
which yield HOȮ, propagation reactions, which yield ȮH, and branching reactions derived from a second-
28
O2-addition step, Q̇OOH + O2. In the latter, upon isomerization of the adduct (ȮOQOOH) when the
29
abstracted H atom is to the –OOH group, scission of that O–O bond yields ȮH and forms a carbonyl
30
group leading to the formation of ketohydroperoxide, HOOQ'=O. Figure 2 illustrates the molecular
31
structure of ketohydroperoxide isomers in cyclohexane and tetrahydropyran oxidation. Chain-branching Page 3 of 28 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
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subsequently unfolds from a second O–O bond-scission step, producing a second ȮH radical and an oxy
2
radical ȮQ'=O. Figure 3 outlines the degenerate chain-branching mechanisms for hydrocarbons. Reactions
3
that impede either the formation of Q̇OOH or that facilitate unimolecular decomposition reactions of
4
Q̇OOH lowers the rate of second-O2-addition and, ultimately, the degree of chain-branching during
5
combustion. O
OH
OH
O
O
(a)
O
(b) 2-hydroperoxy-cyclohexa-1-one (m/z 130)
6 7
O
5-hydroperoxy-2-oxotetrahydropyran (m/z 132)
Figure 2. Representative ketohydroperoxide isomers and corresponding mass-to-charge ratios from (a) cyclohexane oxidation, derived from a -Q̇OOH radical, and (b) from tetrahydropyran oxidation, derived from a -Q̇OOH radical. RH - H2O
+ OH R
alkene + R
+ O2 ROO
conjugate alkene + HOO (chain-inhibition)
QOOH + O2 OOQOOH
cyclic ether/carbonyl + OH (chain-propagation)
-scission products + OH (chain-propagation)
HOOQOOH
HOOQ=O + OH
OQ=O + OH + OH
(chain-branching)
8 9 10 11 12
Figure 3. Hydrocarbon oxidation paradigm depicting the degenerate chain-branching mechanism mediated by reactions involving Q̇OOH radicals. The bold, blue-colored text indicates a reaction pathway that depletes Q̇OOH radicals that may otherwise react with O2 to form ketohydroperoxide species (HOOQ'=O) leading subsequently to chain-branching. Analysis of products from Q̇OOH -scission is the focus of the present work.
13
Reaction pathways in Figure 3 are influenced by molecular structure including functional groups common
14
to biofuels such as alcohols, ketones, esters, and ethers. For example, the distribution of radicals from
15
initiation reactions such as RH + ȮH → Ṙ + H2O favors the formation of isomers in ethers because of Page 4 of 28 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
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the lower C–H bond energies 24-27. Depending on the type of functional group, the unpaired electron on
2
carbon creates resonance-stabilized radicals, as in ketones 28-29 and esters, 30-31 that disfavor reactions with
3
O2, or facilitates chain-inhibiting steps, as in alcohols 32 and ethers 24, 26. One example of the latter, in the
4
case of cyclic ethers, is an increase in ring-opening rates of radicals in tetrahydropyran 24, 27 relative to
5
ring-opening rates of initial radicals in cyclohexane.
6
While several experimental and computational studies on cyclohexane oxidation exist at temperatures
7
below 1000 K 24, 33-37, a limited number of combustion-relevant studies exist for tetrahydropyran. Telfah et
8
al.
9
radicals, produced using Cl-initiated oxidation, to resolve the geometries of structural conformers. Quantum
10
chemical calculations were conducted to determine Franck−Condon factors for vibronic transitions and
11
indicated that ~80% of the peroxy radicals are conformers of -tetrahydropyranylperoxy, the majority of
12
which are axial. Dagaut et al. 39 measured ignition delay times in a shock tube and species profiles in a jet-
13
stirred reactor and also developed the first detailed chemical kinetics model for pressure and temperature
14
ranges of 2 – 10 atm and 800 – 1700 K, respectively. However, peroxy radical chemistry was not included.
15
Labbe et al.
16
pyrolysis and high-temperature ignition and flame properties of tetrahydropyran, and also constructed a
17
comprehensive chemical kinetics model covering a broader parameter space in temperature, pressure, and
18
fuel concentration than in Dagaut et al. 39. Under both pyrolysis and oxidation conditions, H-abstraction
19
reactions were found to be the principal removal pathway of tetrahydropyran, with abstraction favored at
20
the carbon. The resultant radicals were postulated to decompose via -scission through a number of
21
channels, as evidenced by the detection of corresponding stable species using GC/MS.
22
Rotavera et al.
23
tetrahydropyran on chain-termination in comparison to cyclohexane. Below 700 K and 10 Torr, chain-
24
termination is more favorable in tetrahydropyran due to coupled effects of (1) lower C–H bond energy of
25
the -carbon, which leads to -tetrahydropyranyl being the dominant initial radical, and (2) the barrier to
26
direct HOȮ formation on the -tetrahydropyranyl + O2 surface being lower by approximately 5 kcal/mol.
27
With increasing temperature, however, competition from -tetrahydropyranyl ring-opening reduced the
28
flux through Ṙ + O2 and subsequent product formation thereafter – an effect compounded by the fact that
29
abstraction at the weakest C–H bond produces the initial radical most amenable to ring-opening.
30
The present work expands on Rotavera et al. 24 by quantifying branching fractions of intermediates formed
31
via Q̇OOH ring-opening reactions (cf. bold text in Figure 3) that diminish the overall production of
32
ketohydroperoxides in tetrahydropyran oxidation. The results are contextualized by comparison to
38
measured cavity ring-down spectra of the à ← X̃ electronic transitions of tetrahydropyranylperoxy
40
conducted speciation measurements in low-pressure flames. Tran et al.
24
27
studied the
employed MPIMS experiments to determine the influence of the ether group in
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analogous reactions in cyclohexane oxidation, for which intermediates from such reactions were not
2
detected. Three specific ring-opening mechanisms for tetrahydropyran are discussed, each of which are
3
derived from -Q̇OOH radicals. Other, minor reaction pathways related to Q̇OOH ring-opening are also
4
discussed.
5 6
Branching fractions were measured in chlorine atom-initiated oxidation experiments conducted using
7
MPIMS on tetrahydropyran and cyclohexane at 10 and 1520 Torr, where [O2] = 1.9 ∙ 1016 and 3.0 ∙ 1018
8
molecules cm–3, respectively, and from 500 – 700 K. More broadly, the aim is to examine the influence of
9
an ether functional group in cyclic hydrocarbons on the formation of ketohydroperoxides and related impact
10
on chain-branching propensity. Connecting product formation to specific Ṙ and Q̇OOH ring-opening
11
reactions provides the basis for determining the impact of the ether group.
12
2. Experimental and computational approach
13
MPIMS experiments were conducted on cyclohexane and tetrahydropyran to quantify branching fractions
14
of initial radicals forming species from ring-opening reactions of either Ṙ or Q̇OOH radicals via chain-
15
propagating steps coincident with ȮH. Species concentrations were quantified and the results were utilized
16
to calculate the flux of initial radicals forming ring-opened products. In the case of tetrahydropyran, because
17
of the three distinct radicals formed, structure-activity relations (SAR) were applied to the RH + Ċl → Ṙ +
18
HCl reaction in order to estimate the branching ratio of , , and radicals. Complementary ab initio
19
calculations consisting of stationary point energies on pentanedial were also conducted to draw inference
20
into the experimental observations on dissociative ionization and fragment ion structure.
21
2.1. Multiplexed photoionization mass spectrometry (MPIMS) measurements
22
The MPIMS experiments were conducted in a 1.05-cm diameter slow-flow quartz reactor 41 using pulsed-
23
photolytic chlorine atom-initiated oxidation, highly diluted in He, with constant initial reactant number
24
densities (Table 1) at two pressures (10 Torr and 1520 Torr) and three temperatures (500 K, 600 K, and
25
700 K). High-purity O2 and He and were co-flowed with separate gas-phase mixtures of He with reactant
26
(i.e. cyclohexane or tetrahydropyran) and with oxalyl chloride, (COCl)2. Concentrations in the reactor were
27
controlled by flow rates of the four gases that were defined using thermal-based mass flow controllers.
28
Photolysis of oxalyl chloride, using unfocused 248-nm light from an excimer laser, generated Ċl atoms
29
homogeneous along both the radial and longitudinal axes of the reactor. The Ċl atoms react via RH + Ċl →
30
Ṙ + HCl to form the initial Ṙ radicals, which subsequently undergo pseudo-first-order reaction with O2. To
31
minimize side chemistry unrelated to Ṙ + O2, pseudo-first-order conditions were employed for RH + Ċl
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such that Ṙ + Ċl reactions remain negligible, and the > 103 excess of [O2] relative to [Ċl] forces Ṙ + O2 to
2
be the dominant reaction.
3 4 5
Table 1. Initial number densities of reactants (molecules · cm–3) and pressures utilized for Cl-atom-initiated oxidation experiments on tetrahydropyran and cyclohexane. [He] dilution balance is not listed. Pseudo-first-order conditions were utilized. [RH]0:[Ċl]0 > 20 and [O2]0:[Ṙ]0 > 2000.
pressure
[RH]0
[O2]0
[Ċl]0
10 Torr
1.9 · 1014
1.9 · 1016
8.8 · 1012
1520 Torr
5.0 · 1015
3.0 · 1018
9.8 · 1013
6 7
Ċl atoms were produced using 248-nm photolysis of oxalyl chloride (𝜎248 nm = 2.66 10–19 cm2 molec.–1 42-
8
43),
9
instantaneously with a quantum yield of one by (COCl)2 + h → Ċl + CO + ClCO*, and the second Ċl atom
10
is generated from dissociation of chemically activated ClCO via ClCO* → Ċl + CO on timescales
11
appreciably short relative to the oxidation timescales of interest. Under the experimental conditions herein,
12
collisional quenching of ClCO* is unimportant (i.e. the ClCO* dissociation rate is shorter than the time
13
between collisions) and the timescale of the second step is ~1 s. The co-product of (COCl)2 photolysis,
14
CO, is unreactive at the temperatures and pressures herein and is not relevant to the oxidation reactions
15
studied. Depletion timescales of Ċl by RH under the concentrations listed in Table 1 are ~ 20 s at 10 Torr
16
and ~ 1 s at 1520 Torr, assuming kRH + Ċl = 2.2 · 10–10 cm3 · molec.–1 · s–1 44. Initial depletion percentages
17
of [RH]0 by Ċl in both cyclohexane and tetrahydropyran remained near 5%, determined using 13C time
18
profiles (Supplemental Material S1). Secondary depletion timescales of RH, predominantly by OH
19
radicals formed from R + O2, were evident in the 13C time profiles and led to additional RH consumption
20
of approximately 5 – 10%.
21
The majority of the photoionization experiments were conducted at the Chemical Dynamics Beamline of
22
the Advanced Light Source 45-46 over a photon energy range of 8.0 – 11.0 eV using 50-meV intervals for
23
tetrahydropyran oxidation, and similarly for cyclohexane oxidation with the exception of a lower bound of
24
8.5 eV. Measurements were also conducted at Sandia National Laboratories using the Lyman-alpha line
25
from a hydrogen-discharge lamp (nominally 10.2 eV). Products from the Ċl-initiated oxidation reactions
26
exit the quartz reactor through a 600-m side orifice into a detector region maintained at ~10–8 Torr forming
27
a near-effusive molecular beam, which is then collimated by a 1.5-mm diameter skimmer positioned
28
approximately 20 mm downstream from the side orifice. Cations, consisting of both parent and fragment
29
ions, are formed by orthogonally intersecting the collimated molecular beam with quasi-continuous photons
which occurs via a single-photon process and a two-step mechanism 42. The first Ċl atom is generated
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produced either from tunable synchrotron radiation or from the H2-discharge lamp and then detected using
2
an orthogonal-acceleration time-of-flight mass spectrometer equipped with microchannel plates.
3
Photoionization mass spectra were recorded at 20-s time intervals over a span of 170 ms (20-ms pre-
4
photolysis and 150-ms post-photolysis) and normalized to photocurrent, which changes with photon energy.
5
The time-dependent mass spectra were measured using a 4-Hz photolysis repetition rate of the excimer
6
laser and signal-averaged at a given photon energy. In order to ensure that no residual gases from the
7
previous reaction remained, flow rates were set such that the volume inside of the reactor was completely
8
replenished with reactants in between laser pulses, a process verified by observing a baseline pre-photolysis
9
signal of zero for m/z corresponding to product masses. Sequential recording of the time-dependent mass
10
spectra at discrete photon energies led to a three-dimensional measurement (m/z, time, photon energy) of
11
products from the oxidation reactions. The time dimension comes from the position of the reacting gases
12
relative to the side orifice at the instant the Ċl atoms are generated in the reactor, and the photon energy
13
dimension comes from the range and energy step size set for the experiment. Background-subtraction is
14
applied to the mass spectra to remove non-time-resolved pre-photolysis signals, producing difference mass
15
spectra. Integration of the difference mass spectra at a given m/z over a selected range of time yields
16
photoionization spectra, and integration over a selected photon energy range yields time histories.
17
In order to quantify species concentrations and assign isomeric contributions to the peaks in the mass
18
spectra, absolute photoionization cross-sections 𝜎(𝐸) were measured using 25-meV steps for several
19
species in separate experiments as reference spectra (Supplementary Material S2): cyclohexane,
20
cyclohexene, tetrahydropyran, 3,4-dihydro-2H-pyran, 3,6-dihydro-2H-pyran, 3-butenal, and pentanedial.
21
With the exception of pentanedial, for which quantification required additional analysis (Supplemental
22
Material S3), binary mixtures with He were prepared and delivered via flow controllers. Cross-sections
23
were measured at 600 K in all cases with the exception of pentanedial for which 500 K and 700 K
24
measurements were taken to check for any temperature dependence of fragment ion formation. The 𝜎(𝐸)
25
of species herein are defined relative to propene in accord with the procedure described in 47, where the
26
absolute photoionization cross-section from Person and Nicole
27
(10.325 eV) = 10.473 Mb. Because the normalization is the same for the spectra in both the reference
28
measurements and oxidation measurements, an energy-dependent scaling factor is not used.
29
Branching fractions are defined as the concentration of a given species relative to the initial radical number
30
density [Ṙ]0, and were measured using least-squares fitting of the corresponding absolute photoionization
31
spectra time-integrated 30 ms post-photolysis (i.e. 30 ms of reaction time). The equation for quantifying
32
branching fractions is derived in Supplemental Material S4. Because of the pseudo-first-order conditions
48
at a single photon energy is used: 𝜎
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employed, [RH]0:[Ċl]0 = 60, the initial depletion of both tetrahydropyran and cyclohexane is due to Ċl
2
atoms being consumed via abstraction exclusively by RH to produce Ṙ, i.e. [Ṙ]0 ≌ [Ċl]0. Using a laser
3
power of 1.5 W (photolysis flux ~124 mJ cm–2) and cross-section of oxalyl chloride 42-43, [Ṙ]0 ~ 8.8 · 1012
4
at 10 Torr and ~9.8 · 1013 at 1520 Torr.
5
2.2. Initial radical distribution from tetrahydropyran + Cl reactions
6
Structure-activity relationship (SAR) calculations were conducted for tetrahydropyran + Ċl → Ṙ + HCl in
7
order to approximate the distribution of initial Ṙ radicals , , and (cf. Figure 1). The approximation
8
relies on the modification of a base rate coefficient using empirically derived substituent factors F(x) to
9
account for the influence of moieties adjacent to the site of H-abstraction. The rate coefficient at 298 K for
10
cyclohexane + Ċl → cyclohexyl + HCl of Aschmann and Atkinson
11
substituent factors for F(–CH2–) of 0.79 49 and 3.72 for F(–O–) were used. The latter substituent factor is
12
derived from Aschmann and Atkinson 50 assuming the same reduction as for F(–CH2–) when H-abstraction
13
from an ether group is by Ċl compared to ȮH 49. The SAR-predicted rate coefficient for tetrahydropyran +
14
Ċl → Ṙ + HCl (4.78 · 10–10 molec. cm–3) is within a factor of approximately two compared with the
15
measurements of Giri and Roscoe 51 and Alwe et al. 52, and the distribution of Ṙ is dominated by radicals,
16
which is consistent with the ab initio calculations of Ballesteros et al. 44. On a per-C–H bond basis, the
17
branching ratio for tetrahydropyranyl radicals is approximated as :: = 0.76:0.16:0.08, which is similar
18
to the distribution in Tran et al. 27. The results are also consistent with the spectroscopic results from Telfah
19
et al. 38 in which ~80% of the peroxy radicals were -ROȮ. Using a different method of approximation, the
20
radical remains dominant in H-abstraction reactions from tetrahydropyran by ȮH 53. Since H-abstraction
21
reactions by Ċl are weakly dependent on temperature 54 and pressure 55-56, the abovementioned branching
22
ratio is similar over the range of experimental conditions herein.
23
2.3. ab initio calculations
24
Stationary point energies were calculated for isomerization of pentanedial cation to examine
25
photodissociation pathways leading to observed fragment ions. The saddle point geometries and vibrational
26
analyses were conducted with Gaussian 09 57 using M06-2x functional with a 6-311++G(d,p) basis set. The
27
energies of all reactants, saddle points, and products were also calculated and conformational searches were
28
executed to determine the lowest energy structures including axial and equatorial conformers. Confirmation
29
of saddle point geometries rested on verification of single imaginary frequencies and on intrinsic reaction
30
coordinate (IRC) calculations showing maximum energy at the coordinates of the optimized geometry.
31
Adiabatic ionization energies were calculated for several species, including ketohydroperoxide isomers,
32
(Table S1) using the CBS-QB3 composite method within Gaussian 09 57.
49
(3.07 · 10–10 molec. cm–3) and
Page 9 of 28 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
The Journal of Physical Chemistry
1
3. Results
2
The difference mass spectra in Figure 4, measured from Cl-initiated oxidation of tetrahydropyran at 600 K
3
and 1520 Torr, highlights the primary mass peaks of interest. Mass spectra for all conditions are provided
4
in the Supplemental Material (S5). The negative signals in the difference mass spectra are due to
5
background subtraction 20-ms pre-photolysis and reflect depleted tetrahydropyran [C5H10O]+ and related
6
fragment ions. Chlorinated products from Ċl-addition to R (i.e. R35Cl and R37Cl) were not observed in either
7
case, confirming that peaks appearing in the mass spectra are from product formation via Ṙ + O2 and
8
associated fragment ions or by other relevant reactions. Calibration of the mass spectra was performed using
9
species of known molecular formula and exact mass, spanning m/z 28 (ethene) to m/z 118 (ROOH). Exact
10
mass determinations for other species, where the molecular formula was unknown, used calibrated
11
coefficients that convert time-of-flight to mass. 1.0 600 K 2 atm
Ion Signal (a.u.)
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60
Page 10 of 29
m/z 72 m/z 100 0.5 m/z 70 m/z 30
m/z 132
0.0 20
40
60
80
100
120
140
m/z
12 13 14 15
Figure 4. Difference mass spectrum produced from Ċl-initiated oxidation of tetrahydropyran at 600 K and 2 atm, integrated 30-ms post-photolysis. The photon energy range is 8.5 – 11.0 eV. m/z 132 is ketohydroperoxide ion signal, identified by exact mass 132.042 (C5H8O4).
16
In addition to the oxidation experiments, separate measurements were conducted in absence of oxygen flow
17
to assess whether any formation of products resulted from ring-opening of initial radicals (Figure S6). With
18
oxygen flow restricted, nominal oxygen concentration in the flow cell is estimated at 1012 using the
19
minimum pressure (10–7 Torr) and 21% O2 from ambient air, which is more than 104 lower than in the
20
concentration level used in the oxidation experiments. Three species in particular that are connected to ring-
21
opening reactions of Q̇OOH radicals, discussed in Section 3.2, are ethene, formaldehyde, and 3-butenal.
22
All were observed in absence of O2 flow and the time profile of formaldehyde displayed a significant
23
dependence on [O2] indicating that some portion quantified in the oxidation experiments is attributed to
24
ring-opening of initial radicals, in addition to oxidation reactions (i.e. Q̇OOH ring-opening). The time
Page 10 of 28 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Page 11 of 29 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60
The Journal of Physical Chemistry
1
profiles of ethene and 3-butenal were identical over the 1012 – 1017 range of oxygen concentration (Figure
2
S7).
3
Branching fractions of intermediates that are formed via ring-opening reactions in tetrahydropyran
4
oxidation were quantified, including ethene, formaldehyde, propene, acrolein, 1-butene, and 3-butenal
5
(Table 2). All of the quantified species exhibit a positive temperature dependence, with the exception of
6
3,4-dihydro-2H-pyran due to ring-opening reactions of -tetrahydropyranyl becoming competitive with
7
O2-addition above ~650 K 24. Similar results were determined for cyclohexane (Table S2), although the
8
only main product was cyclohexene (i.e. no ring-opening products). Ion signal at m/z 70, potentially
9
indicative of 3-butenal, was also detected. However, low signal-to-noise ratios in the photoionization
10
spectra prevented definitive assignment and time profiles suggested secondary chemistry as the source
11
(Supplemental Material S8). The focus on ring-opening products provides a means of identifying
12
reactions that inhibit Q̇OOH + O2, and thereby diminish ketohydroperoxide formation either through ring-
13
opening of Ṙ or of Q̇OOH. In the ensuing sections, reaction mechanisms that explain several of the main
14
peaks observed in Figure 4 are discussed in the context of ring-opening reactions. Results from the
15
mechanism analysis are then compared to analogous reactions in cyclohexane that hypothetically lead to
16
the same products, yet are not observed. The comparison highlights the effect of the ether functional group
17
on ring-opening reactions and subsequent implications for ketohydroperoxide formation.
18 19 20 21 22
Table 2. Branching fractions of species quantified (with absolute uncertainties of ±20%) relative to total initial concentration of tetrahydropyranyl radicals. 3,4- and 3,6-dihydro-2H-pyran form via Ṙ + O2 reactions 24, while all other species form via ring-opening reactions. Carbon balance calculations reflect the percentage of products quantified relative to the total carbon in the initial radical population. Branching fractions were calculated based on ion signals integrated 30- and 60-ms post-photolysis in the 10 Torr and 2 atm experiments, respectively. 500 K 10 Torr (2 atm)
600 K 10 Torr (2 atm)
700 K 10 Torr (2 atm)
methyl (m/z 15)
0.1 (0.0)
0.1 (0.0)
0.3 (0.0)
ethene (m/z 28)
0.3 (0.1)
2.0 (0.2)
19.2 (1.6)
formaldehyde (m/z 30)
1.4 (0.4)
6.9 (0.9)
29.8 (19.1)
propene (m/z 42)
0.0 (0.0)
0.0 (0.0)
7.8 (17.1)
acrolein (m/z 56)
0.0 (0.0)
0.0 (0.2)
1.5 (0.4)
1-butene (m/z 56)
0.0 (0.0)
0.0 (0.0)
0.7 (0.3)
3-butenal (m/z 70)
1.0 (0.5)
6.6 (1.6)
9.2 (18.4)
3,4-dihydro-2H-pyran (m/z 84)
5.2 (0.4)
15.9 (4.5)
13.4 (8.5)
3,6-dihydro-2H-pyran (m/z 84)
0.4 (0.2)
3.6 (0.7)
4.3 (0.2)
carbon balance
8.3% (1.6%)
35.1% (8.0%)
86.2% (65.6%)
species formed via ring-opening:
2.7% (1.1%)
15.6% (2.8%)
68.5% (56.9%)
species
Page 11 of 28 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
The Journal of Physical Chemistry
1 2
3.1. Ketohydroperoxides
3
Time profiles of ketohydroperoxide ion signals produced from both tetrahydropyran and cyclohexane
4
oxidation at 2 atm are compared in Figure 5. Similar to observations in n-butane 58-62, ketohydroperoxides
5
are not formed at 500 K over the 60-ms timeframe of the experiment, from either species, because of the
6
multiple elementary reactions that are involved (i.e. two isomerization steps, second-O2-addition, -
7
scission). Additionally, in the case of tetrahydropyran, the barrier height on the -tetrahydropyranyl + O2
8
surface favors direct formation of conjugate alkene + HOȮ, which is enhanced at 500 K and consumes Ṙ
9
radicals that may otherwise undergo second-O2-addition reactions 24. With increasing temperature, the rates
10
of elementary reactions leading to ketohydroperoxide increase and, at 600 K, both tetrahydropyran and
11
cyclohexane produce time-resolved ion signal at m/z 132 and m/z 130, which upon exact mass analysis
12
indicates molecular formulae C5H8O4 and C6H10O3, respectively. At the highest temperature (700 K),
13
ketohydroperoxide formation remains evident in cyclohexane oxidation with a notable increase in the total
14
decomposition rate (Figure 5b). However, the ion signal from tetrahydropyran oxidation at m/z 132
15
becomes zero, indicating that one or more of the elementary steps preceding the formation of
16
ketohydroperoxide are inhibited including ring-opening of Ṙ or of Q̇OOH radicals. Other possibilities
17
include increased rates of reverse reactions, i.e. ȮOQOOH ⇌ Q̇OOH + O2, although ring-opening reactions
18
were responsible for a shift in the reaction mechanism of HOȮ formation in tetrahydropyran 24. Despite the
19
absence of cross-sections, assuming similar magnitudes and noting that the ion signals in Figure 5 are
20
normalized to the total number of laser photolysis shots, the higher signal-to-noise ratio in Figure 5b
21
implies that ketohydroperoxide concentration is higher in cyclohexane oxidation than in tetrahydropyran
22
indicating potential mechanistic differences connected to the ether functional group in the latter species. 0.6
0.4
2 atm
0.2
0.0
0
1.0
(a)
500 K 600 K 700 K
m/z 130 Ion Signal (a.u.)
m/z 132 Ion Signal (a.u.)
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60
Page 12 of 29
20
40
60
0.8 0.6
2 atm
0.4 0.2 0.0
0
Time (ms)
23 24 25
(b)
500 K 600 K 700 K
20
40
60
Time (ms)
Figure 5. Ion signals of ketohydroperoxide time histories in oxidation of (a) tetrahydropyran and (b) cyclohexane at 2 atm. Ketohydroperoxides are not detected in tetrahydropyran oxidation at 700 K, indicating a mechanistic difference with cyclohexane.
Page 12 of 28 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Page 13 of 29
1
In order to examine the temperature dependence of the m/z 132 ion signal from tetrahydropyran on a more-
2
discretized scale, a series of experiments were conducted in 25-K increments from 500 – 700 K using a
3
hydrogen-discharge lamp. Time-dependent ion signal was measured for the same reactant conditions as in
4
Table 1. Total ion counts (Figure 6) were determined from signal integration over 131.94 < m/z < 132.14
5
(m of 0.1 amu around the nominal 132.04) 15-ms post photolysis. For each temperature, integrated ion
6
counts were normalized to the number of photolysis laser shots to avoid bias in overall signal level.
7
Consistent with the time profiles in Figure 5, ion signal is absent at 500 K and 700 K. Notably, the peak in
8
ketohydroperoxide formation occurs near 625 K – identical to the peak temperature in n-butane 60.
500 Ion Counts (Normalized)
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60
The Journal of Physical Chemistry
400 300
m/z 132 (C5H8O4) tetrahydropyran 3 · 1018 [O2] 2 atm
200 100 0 500
550
600
650
700
Temperature (K)
9 10 11 12
Figure 6. Laser-shot-normalized integrated ion counts for m/z 132 in tetrahydropyran oxidation indicating peak ketohydroperoxide formation at 625 K.
13
Explicit determination of the isomeric structure of ketohydroperoxide, from either tetrahydropyran or
14
cyclohexane, was not possible since photoionization spectra are unknown. In order to provide some
15
inference as to potential contributors to the m/z 132 and m/z 130 signal, adiabatic ionization energy
16
calculations were conducted at the CBS-QB3 level for all ten isomers derived from tetrahydropyran and for
17
all three derived from cyclohexane (S9). However, the calculated ionization thresholds depended strongly
18
on ring conformation as well as on the axial/equatorial position and dihedral angle of the –OOH group. For
19
example, the two structures in Figure 7 span a range of ionization energies of ~500 meV. Similarly, for the
20
ortho- isomer in cyclohexane, i.e. where the carbonyl and –OOH groups are located on adjacent carbon
21
atoms, a difference of ~300 meV was calculated (S10).
Page 13 of 28 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
The Journal of Physical Chemistry
(a)
1 2 3
(b)
Figure 7. Optimized structures for two conformers of a ketohydroperoxide isomer, 3-hydroperoxy-2oxotetrahydropyran. Adiabatic ionization energies are (a) 8.98 eV (b) 9.49 eV, which indicates that the range of ~500 meV is due to the spatial orientation of the –OOH group.
4 5
Photoionization spectra of the ketohydroperoxide isomers were measured in 50-meV steps over the range
6
8.0 – 11.0 eV for tetrahydropyran oxidation and similarly from 8.5 – 11.0 eV for cyclohexane oxidation.
7
The spectra from both systems overlap closely with one another and with ketohydroperoxide signal from
8
n-butane in Eskola et al. 60 and Battin-Leclerc et al. 62 (Figure 8). Cyclohexene oxidation also produces a
9
nearly identical photoionization spectrum of ketohydroperoxide 63. The signal-to-noise ratio in the present
10
work precludes definitive assignment of onset energy for either signal. However, ion signal first exceeds
11
the noise level near ~9.2 eV. Above the ionization threshold, the similarity in the spectra is evident and may
12
indicate that the electron removed from the neutral species during ionization is derived from either the
13
carbonyl group or the –OOH group, which is common among the different species. Ketohydroperoxide Ion Signal (a.u.)
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60
Page 14 of 29
14
10
tetrahydropyran cyclohexane n-butane (Eskola et al.) n-butane (Battin-Leclerc et al.)
5
0 8.5
9.0
9.5
10.0
10.5
11.0
Photon Energy (eV)
15 16 17 18
Figure 8. Photoionization spectra of ketohydroperoxide isomers formed in tetrahydropyran and cyclohexane oxidation. 1520 Torr, 600 K, [O2] = 3.0 ∙ 1018 molecules cm–3. The spectra exhibit similarity to ketohydroperoxides produced from n-butane oxidation under similar conditions in both Eskola et al. 60 and in Battin-Leclerc et al. 62.
19
Comparison of the results in Figure 5 between cyclohexane and tetrahydropyran indicates a shift in the
20
reaction mechanism in the latter species due to the presence of the ether functional group. More specifically,
21
the absence of ketohydroperoxide at 700 K is likely due to the presence of reactions facilitated by the ether Page 14 of 28 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Page 15 of 29 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60
The Journal of Physical Chemistry
1
group that reduce the already low steady-state concentration of Q̇OOH, which subsequently reduces the
2
reaction rate of the second-O2-addition step. The sections below describe several reaction mechanisms
3
involving Ṙ and Q̇OOH radicals that prevent ketohydroperoxide formation. In all cases, the branching
4
fractions for the species involved increase with temperature and are appreciable at 700 K, where the carbon
5
balance of products from ring-opening accounts for >70% at 10 Torr and >55% at 1520 Torr (cf. Table 2).
6
3.2. -Q̇OOH ring-opening
7
The depletion of Q̇OOH radicals restricts the formation of ketohydroperoxide, and in the case of
8
tetrahydropyran occurs via ring-opening pathways. Three ring-opening mechanisms involving -Q̇OOH,
9
produced via favorable six-membered transition states in ROȮ isomerization, are discussed: (i) -Q̇OOH
10
→ pentanedial + ȮH, (ii) -Q̇OOH → vinyl formate + ethene + ȮH, (iii) -Q̇OOH → 3-butenal +
11
formaldehyde + ȮH. A fourth channel is also postulated involving acrolein, although likely a minor channel
12
given the small branching fraction of ~1% (cf. Table 2): -Q̇OOH → acrolein + oxirane + ȮH. With the
13
exception of one mechanism, all are initiated from -tetrahydropyranyl, which is consistent with the SAR
14
predictions (Section 2.1) of initial radical yields. The nomenclature in the ensuing sections designating the
15
location of the –OOH group and the unpaired electron adopts the labeling in Figure 1 and specifies the
16
location of the former first and the latter second. For example, -'-Q̇OOH designates the Q̇OOH species
17
where both the –OOH group and the unpaired electron are adjacent to the ether functional group and the
18
prime notation indicates the latter is on the opposite side of the ring.
19
3.2.1. pentanedial + ȮH
20
Ion signal at m/z 100 is identified by the molecular formula C5H8O2, which includes cyclic species (ethers,
21
ketones, and unsaturated alcohols) and (acyclic) pentanedial. Figure 9 compares the ion signal measured
22
in the tetrahydropyran oxidation experiments at 10 Torr for all three temperatures to the photoionization
23
spectrum of pentanedial, which forms via Q̇OOH ring-opening (Figure 10) and inhibits second-O2-addition
24
and subsequent ketohydroperoxide formation. Similar results were obtained at 2 atm (Figure S11). Evident
25
in Figure 9 is the temperature independence of the m/z 100 spectrum, implying either that a small number
26
of species are present or a significant degree of similarity in the photoionization spectra of the 14 potential
27
C5H8O2 isomers. Ion signal is apparent near 9.0 eV and unaccounted for up to ~9.8 eV. While the species
28
producing the signal are unknown, CBS-QB3 calculations indicate that two cyclic ethers ionize near the
29
experimental threshold of ~9.0 eV, accounting for the ~0.08 eV uncertainty in the method – the three-
30
membered bicyclic 2,7-dioxabicyclo[4.1.0]heptane (9.13 eV) and the four-membered bicyclic 2,7-
31
dioxabicyclo[4.1.0]heptane (9.12 eV). The complete list of ionization energies for cyclic ethers of
32
tetrahydropyran is included in the Supplemental Material (S12). Because of unknown photoionization
Page 15 of 28 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
The Journal of Physical Chemistry
1
spectra for the remaining m/z 100 isomers, branching fractions of pentanedial were not determined.
2
However, while the photoionization spectrum of m/z 100 is not solely reproduced by pentanedial,
3
significant overlap is evident, which lends confidence that the ring-opening mechanism is consuming the
4
-'-Q̇OOH radical. A similar reaction was a dominant pathway in tetrahydrofuran oxidation, leading to
5
butanedial + ȮH 26. 10 m/z 100 Ion Signal (a.u.)
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60
Page 16 of 29
500 K 600 K 700 K pentanedial 10 Torr
5
0 8.5
9.0
6 7 8
9.5
10.0
10.5
11.0
Photon Energy (eV)
Figure 9. Photoionization spectra of m/z 100 produced from tetrahydropyran oxidation at 10 Torr overlaid with the spectrum for pentanedial. O
O
OH O
O
+
OH
9 10
Figure 10. Ring-opening mechanism of -'-Q̇OOH forming pentanedial and ȮH.
11
In addition to the overlap of the spectra in Figure 9, confirmation of pentanedial formation is provided
12
from photoionization cross-section measurements that revealed significant photofragmentation, particularly
13
at m/z 72. Other fragment ions appear at m/z 54, 56, 57, 58, 67, 68, 81, 82, and 83. At the highest photon
14
energy utilized in the oxidation experiments, 11.0 eV, the peak ratio in the mass spectrum between the
15
fragment ion at m/z 72 and the parent ion at m/z 100 is approximately ~60:1 (Figure 11). Accounting for
16
the abundance of other fragment ions, some of which are of similar magnitude to m/z 72 (Figure S13), the
17
decomposition of pentanedial cation is a dominant process that results in appreciably small ion signal at the
18
parent mass (m/z 100).
Page 16 of 28 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Page 17 of 29
1.0
500 K 5 Torr
H
O
Ion Signal (a.u.)
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60
The Journal of Physical Chemistry
0.5 O
O
0.0 70
100
102
m/z
1 2 3
72
Figure 11. Photoionization mass spectrum of pentanedial at 11.0 eV (500 K, 5 Torr) highlighting the parent ion signal at m/z 100 and the fragment ion signal at m/z 72.
4 5
To explain the photodissociation propensity of pentanedial, stationary point energies were calculated to
6
determine the barrier height leading to the production of a fragment ion of m/z 72 from pentanedial, which
7
requires the loss of a neutral moiety of m/z 28. Considering the loss of carbon monoxide (CO, m/z 28), a
8
fragment ion of the molecular formula C4H8O (m/z 72) forms. The mechanism responsible for facile
9
pentanedial fragmentation into m/z 72 is depicted in Figure 12, which is supported by quantum chemical
10
calculations. A barrier height of 3.0 kcal/mol is calculated at the M06-2x/6-311++G(d,p) level of theory for
11
isomerization of pentanedial cation to m/z 100 cation [H⋯OCH(CH2)3Ċ=O]+, which is 7.5 kcal/mol more
12
stable. The isomerized cation decomposes readily to form [H⋯OCHCH2CH2ĊH2]+ (m/z 72) and CO, similar
13
to the pathway leading to pent-1-al-1-yl from ring-opening the neutral radical -tetrahydropyranyl 24.
3 kcal/mol
14 15 16
Figure 12. Pentanedial cation isomerization via a 3.0 kcal/mol barrier leading to the formation of fragment ion [H⋯OCHCH2CH2ĊH2]+ (m/z 72) and neutral CO (m/z 28).
17 18
The photoionization cross-section experiments on pentanedial were conducted at several temperatures and
19
fragment ion spectra at m/z 72 did not display temperature dependence. Photoionization spectra of the m/z
20
72 fragment ion at 500 K and 700 K are overlaid in Figure 13 against the ion signal at m/z 72 from the
21
oxidation experiments. Noting that ion signal in the latter case shifts towards lower energies with increasing
Page 17 of 28 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
The Journal of Physical Chemistry
1
temperature, and that fragment ion spectra are temperature independent, the signal from ~9.3 – 10.2 eV in
2
Figure 13 is due to either to neutral species or to different fragment ions from species that are not produced
3
at 500 K. However, at 500 K, pentanedial fragment ion is the sole source of m/z 72 signal, which indicates
4
that Q̇OOH ring-opening occurs despite the relatively low temperature. 10
m/z 72 Ion Signal (a.u.)
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60
Page 18 of 29
pentanedial fragment ion (500 K) pentanedial fragment ion (700 K) 500 K 600 K 700 K
5
0 9.0
9.5
10.5
11.0
Photon Energy (eV)
5 6 7
10.0
Figure 13. Temperature dependence of relative photoionization spectrum for m/z 72 fragment ion measured in tetrahydropyran oxidation at 10 Torr; identical spectra were measured at 2 atm.
8 9
3.2.2. vinyl formate + ethene + ȮH
10
One plausible contribution to the m/z 72 ion signal below 10.2 eV at 600 K and 700 K in Figure 13 is vinyl
11
formate (C3H4O2, m/z 72.021), which may form coincident with ethene and ȮH via the Q̇OOH ring-opening
12
mechanism in Figure 14. The photoionization spectrum of vinyl formate is overlaid in Figure 15 with ion
13
signal from the oxidation experiments and with the pentanedial fragment ion. The onset energy for vinyl
14
formate of ~9.6 eV coincides with the increase in ion signal at 600 K and given the spectral shape may also
15
contribute to ion signal at 700 K, particularly since the pathway in Figure 14 is expected to become
16
increasingly relevant with higher temperature. Lending additional support to the presence of vinyl formate
17
is the detection of ethene (Figure 16a), the co-product with vinyl formate, on the same kinetic timescale
18
(Figure 16b). Ethene is a significant product at 10 Torr where the initial radical population yields ~19%
19
and the branching fraction, at both pressures, exhibits positive temperature dependence (cf. Table 2). O
O
OH
O
O
+
+
OH
20 21
Figure 14. Ring-opening mechanism of -'-Q̇OOH yielding vinyl formate, ethene, and hydroxyl radical.
Page 18 of 28 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Page 19 of 29
m/z 72 Ion Signal (a.u.)
6
vinyl formate pentanedial fragment ion 500 K 600 K 4 700 K 10 Torr O
O
9.5
10.0
10.5
H
11.0
Photon Energy (eV)
1 2 3
O
2
0 9.0
Figure 15. Photoionization spectra of m/z 72 from tetrahydropyran oxidation at 10 Torr overlaid with the vinyl formate and the m/z 72 pentanedial fragment ion spectra. 1.0
10
(b) Ion Signal (Normalized)
(a)
Ion Signal (a.u.)
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60
The Journal of Physical Chemistry
m/z 28 ethene 5
0 9.5
600 K 10 Torr
0.8 0.6 m/z 28
0.4 m/z 72 0.2
600 K 10 Torr
0.0
10.0
10.5
11.0
0
Photon Energy (eV)
10
20
30
Time (ms)
4 5
Figure 16. (a) Photoionization spectrum of ethene overlaid with m/z 28 ion signal. (b) Correspondence of time profiles for m/z 28 (ethene) and m/z 72 indicating that both species form on the same kinetic timescale.
6
3.2.3. 3-butenal + formaldehyde + ȮH
7
A third significant ring-opening pathway affecting ketohydroperoxide formation in tetrahydropyran, either
8
by consuming Q̇OOH or Ṙ radicals, involves the formation of 3-butenal (m/z 70) in a chain-propagating
9
step. Figure 17a compares the photoionization cross-section of 3-butenal with m/z 70 ion signal at 10 Torr.
10
The comparison is identical at 2 atm, meaning that no other contributions are evident at either pressure and
11
3-butenal is the only species producing signal at m/z 70. Three possible channels for producing 3-butenal
12
are depicted in Figures 18a – 18c in which formaldehyde (CH2O) and ȮH are co-products. Additional
13
confirmation of the ring-opening pathways in Figure 18 is the identical time profiles of formaldehyde and
14
3-butenal (Figure 17b), indicating that both species form from the same reaction.
Page 19 of 28 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
The Journal of Physical Chemistry
15
1.5
500 K 600 K 700 K 3-butenal
10
Ion Signal (a.u.)
m/z 70 Ion Signal (a.u.)
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60
(a) O
5
0 8.5
9.0
9.5
10.0
10.5
600 K 10 Torr
1.0 (b) 0.5 formaldehyde 3-butenal 0.0
11.0
0
Photon Energy (eV)
1 2 3
Page 20 of 29
10
20
30
Time (ms)
Figure 17. (a) Photoionization spectrum of 3-butenal overlaid onto m/z 70 ion signal measured in tetrahydropyran oxidation at 10 Torr and time-integrated 30 ms post-photolysis. (b) Time histories of formaldehyde and 3-butenal; 600 K, 10 Torr.
4 O
O
5 6 7 8 9
O
OH
OH
O +
CH2O
+
OH
O
O
OH
O +
CH2O
+
OH
Figure 18b. Ring-opening mechanism of -Q̇OOH leading to 3-butenal (m/z 70) via unimolecular decomposition via concerted -scission reactions. O
O
O
13 14 15
O
Figure 18a. Ring-opening mechanism leading to 3-butenal (m/z 70). The reaction initiates via oxidation of pentanal5-yl, formed by ring-opening of -tetrahydropyranyl. The ring-opened radical subsequently reacts with O2 and isomerizes to a Q̇OOH via 6-membered transition state. The -Q̇OOH then undergoes concerted -scission reactions.
O
10 11 12
O
+ O2
OH
O
OH
O +
CH2O
+
OH
Figure 18c. Ring-opening mechanism of -Q̇OOH leading to 3-butenal (m/z 70) via unimolecular decomposition via concerted -scission reactions.
16 17
4. Discussion
18
The results above, namely the ketohydroperoxide time profiles and subsequent reaction mechanisms
19
consuming Ṙ and Q̇OOH radicals, points to mechanistic differences that restrict second-O2-addition
20
reactions in tetrahydropyran, as compared to cyclohexane, due to the ether functional group in the former. Page 20 of 28 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
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The Journal of Physical Chemistry
1
In the -tetrahydropyranyl radical, and similarly for Q̇OOH radicals when the unpaired electron occupies
2
the carbon, the electron density increases on the radical site and decreases around the non-radical C atom.
3
The result is incipient C=O bond formation between the oxygen and the carbon radical site, and an increase
4
in the coulomb repulsive force between the C–O bond with the non-radical C atom. Combined, the change
5
in electronic structure results in ring-opened radicals that undergo subsequent oxidation reactions leading
6
to distinct products. CBS-QB3 calculations were conducted to determine the change in C–O bond length in
7
the optimized geometries of the three radicals. For reference, in closed-shell tetrahydropyran the C–O bond
8
length is 1.422 Å, which is identical in both - and -tetrahydropyranyl radicals. In -tetrahydropyranyl,
9
where the unpaired electron is on the carbon, the C–O bond decreases by ~0.1 to 1.369 Å while the C–O
10
bond non-radical carbon is slightly longer (~0.02 Å). A similar effect is exhibited in Q̇OOH radicals. The
11
shortening of the C–O bond enables facile ring-opening reactions, which in the case of in -
12
tetrahydropyranyl radicals leads to pentanal-5-yl and in Q̇OOH radicals to the products in Figure 18.
13
Because the ether group enables facile ring-opening reactions, evident in chain-termination reactions 24 and
14
in the branching fractions in Table 2, Q̇OOH radicals that could otherwise react with O2 instead produce
15
small, unsaturated oxygenates in chain-propagating reactions. Because such electronic structure changes
16
does not occur in cyclohexane, Q̇OOH ring-opening reactions are not significant in cyclohexane below 700
17
K, which maintains the second-O2-addition step necessary for ketohydroperoxide formation. The ab initio
18
calculations in Knepp et al. 37 indicated that - and -Q̇OOH radicals of cyclohexane are thermalized up to
19
least 800 K (i.e. relaxation timescales are short relative to chemical timescales) and the remaining (-)
20
Q̇OOH is stable up to 650 K. -Q̇OOH radicals encounter a barrier height of ~12 kcal/mol to form cyclic
21
ether (1,2-epoxycyclohexane) + ȮH. However, -scission reactions lead either to cyclohexene + HOȮ or
22
to a hydroperoxy-substituted radical, H2C=CHCH(–OOH)CH2CH2ĊH2, the barriers for which are higher
23
than the cyclic ether channel.
24
An example comparison is confirmed upon analysis of the mass spectra for the various products. Figure
25
19 shows the ring-opening pathway postulated for tetrahydropyran (cf. Figure 18b) and an analogous
26
(hypothetical) reaction for cyclohexane. The two bond-breaking schemes are identical, yet lead to distinct
27
products depending on the starting reactant being a Q̇OOH derived from tetrahydropyran (top reaction) or
28
from cyclohexane (bottom reaction). The mass spectra in Figure S14 shows no evidence of m/z 30 from
29
cyclohexane oxidation, which precludes the latter reaction and confirms that the ring-opening pathway does
30
not occur. In addition, speciation studies on cyclohexane oxidation do not report 3-butenal as a product 35,
31
64-65.
Comparison of other pathways in Figure 18 affirms the absence of ring-opening in cyclohexane (S15).
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O
O
O
OH
OH
O
O
O
OH
OH
Page 22 of 29
O +
CH2O
O +
+
OH
+
OH
1 2
Figure 19. Comparison of ring-opening pathways in tetrahydropyran and cyclohexane.
3
The main product from the cyclohexane oxidation experiments was cyclohexene. No ring-opening products
4
consistent with the bond-breaking routes occurring in tetrahydropyran were detected. Because of m/z 70
5
ion signal observed, 3-butenal was potentially formed from cyclohexane oxidation. However, least-squares
6
fitting of the photoionization spectra was inconclusive due to low signal-to-noise ratios at both 10 Torr and
7
2 atm (Supplemental Material S8). Because no clear pathway from cyclohexane to 3-butenal exists
8
without forming ethene, which is not detected in present work, the conclusion is drawn that the pathway
9
via the ring-opening mechanism in Figure 19 is not occurring. In addition, 3-butenal was not detected in
10
the 1-atm jet-stirred reactor experiments on cyclohexane in Serinyel et al. 35.
11
To expand on the potential for ring-opening in cyclohexane, reactions of hex-1-en-6-yl were examined.
12
Cyclohexyl ring-opens to hex-1-en-6-yl, the oxidation of which may lead via HOȮ-loss to 1,5-hexadiene
13
(m/z 82) or via Q̇OOH-mediated reactions to unsaturated cyclic ether + ȮH. As reported in Rotavera et al.
14
24
15
by cyclohexene. The absence of 1,5-hexadiene in the m/z 82 photoionization spectrum confirms that hex-
16
1-en-6-yl + O2 → 1,5-hexadiene + HOȮ is not occurring. m/z 98 ion signal in the present work may include
17
some contribution from unsaturated cyclic ether. However, since spectral deconvolution was not possible,
18
the formation of unsaturated cyclic ethers in cyclohexane oxidation remains an unknown.
19
Another possible channel for hex-1-en-6-yl is decomposition into ethene + but-1-en-4-yl. The alkenyl
20
radical may subsequently react with O2 and form 1,3-butadiene + HOȮ. However, while ion signal at m/z
21
54 near 9.1 eV, low signal levels prevented definitive assignment. Similarly, the time profile for m/z 54
22
appears delayed from time-zero, indicating secondary chemistry. Outside of forming a co-product of ethene,
23
which is not formed in the present work and necessary for a Q̇OOH-mediated reaction mechanism, a source
24
of 3-butenal from cyclohexane remains unclear.
25
The ether group in tetrahydropyran promotes ring-opening of the type in Figure 19, for both Ṙ and Q̇OOH,
26
and is a prominent feature in ether oxidation. Several minor species were detected and quantified in the
under the same conditions as the present work, m/z 82 ion signal from cyclohexane is reproduced solely
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The Journal of Physical Chemistry
1
tetrahydropyran experiments: acrolein, propene, 1-butene, and methyl were detected and quantified (cf.
2
Table 2). With the exception of one case (propene) all species were produced with branching fractions of
3
~1%. Acrolein is postulated to form from ring-opening of --Q̇OOH, which yields oxirane and ȮH as co-
4
products (Figure S16). The two alkenes likely arise from reaction of 1-propyl and 1-butyl, which are formed
5
from the linear ring-opened radical -tetrahydropyranyl 24. The branching fraction of propene was zero at
6
500 K and 600 K, for both pressures, yet at the highest temperature (700 K) rose to 7.8 10 Torr and 17.1 at
7
2 atm. The source of methyl radical is unclear.
8
The absence of significant ring-opening reactions in cyclohexane and the formation of ketohydroperoxides
9
from 600 – 700 K (cf. Figure 5) is consistent with distinct negative temperature coefficient (NTC) behavior
10
exhibited in ignition delay times, as reported in Lemaire et al. 66, Daley et al. 67, and Vranckx et al. 68, as
11
well as in speciation studies
12
1000 K, where peroxy radical chemistry dominates. In addition, no low-temperature chemistry models exist
13
for tetrahydropyran despite recent mechanism development 27, 39-40. Because the ether group enables ring-
14
opening reactions of Ṙ and Q̇OOH, which inhibit ketohydroperoxide formation, tetrahydropyran may prove
15
a useful biofuel blending agent for high-octane combustion systems. For such an application, the
16
development of a low-temperature chemical kinetics mechanism for tetrahydropyran is necessary. As a first
17
step, potential energy surface calculations of unimolecular Ṙ and Q̇OOH decomposition pathways, as well
18
as detailed Master Equation analysis, are required.
34-35.
No ignition delay time measurements exist for tetrahydropyran below
19 20 21
5. Conclusion
22
Reaction mechanisms of tetrahydropyran and cyclohexane were studied using Cl-initiated oxidation in
23
MPIMS experiments at 10 and 1520 torr and from 500 – 700 K. In the tetrahydropyran experiments, several
24
ring-opening mechanisms facilitated by the ether group were postulated to explain the absence of
25
ketohydroperoxide at 700 K, as indicated by time profiles at m/z 132. In total, at 700 K, ring-opening
26
reactions were significant in tetrahydropyran oxidation, involving both Ṙ and Q̇OOH and accounting for
27
>70% of product formation at 10 Torr and >55% at 1520 Torr. Three main pathways were confirmed via
28
photoionization spectra analysis: (i) -Q̇OOH → pentanedial + ȮH, (ii) -Q̇OOH → vinyl formate + ethene
29
+ ȮH, (iii) -Q̇OOH → 3-butenal + formaldehyde + ȮH. The flux of Q̇OOH radicals through unimolecular
30
decomposition channels reduces the overall rate of the second-O2-addition step and, by extension,
31
diminishes ketohydroperoxide formation owing to the presence of the ether group.
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1
6. Supporting Information
2
Supporting information including time profiles, photoionization cross-sections, derivation of branching
3
fraction equation, mass spectra, CBS-QB3 calculations (geometries, ionization energies), photoionization
4
spectra, and additional mechanistic analysis is available via http://pubs.acs.org.
5
7. Acknowledgements
6
The operation and maintenance of the Sandia multiplexed photoionization mass spectrometry apparatus
7
and the participation of RC, IA, DLO, LS and CAT are supported by the Office of Chemical Sciences,
8
Biosciences, and Geosciences and the Office of Basic Energy Sciences of the U.S. Department of Energy
9
(BES/USDOE). Sandia National Laboratories is a multi-mission laboratory managed and operated by
10
National Technology and Engineering Solutions of Sandia, LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Honeywell
11
International, Inc., for the U.S. Department of Energy’s National Nuclear Security Administration under
12
contract DE-NA0003525. The present work describes objective technical results and analysis. Any
13
subjective views or opinions that might be expressed in the paper do not necessarily represent the views of
14
the USDOE or the United States Government. The research herein used resources (Beamline 9.0.2) of the
15
Advanced Light Source, which is a DOE Office of Science User Facility under contract no. DE-AC02-
16
05CH11231. BR and AK acknowledge support from the U.S. Department of Transportation under award
17
693JJ31945035.
18
8. References
19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38
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28. Scheer, A. M.; Eskola, A. J.; Osborn, D. L.; Sheps, L.; Taatjes, C. A., Resonance Stabilization Effects on Ketone Autoxidation: Isomer-Specific Cyclic Ether and Ketohydroperoxide Formation in the Low-Temperature (400–625 K) Oxidation of Diethyl Ketone. J. Phys. Chem. A 2016, 120 (43), 86258636. 29. Sebbar, N.; Bozzelli, J. W.; Bockhorn, H., Thermochemistry and Kinetics for 2-Butanone-1-Yl Radical (Ch2·C(═O)Ch2ch3) Reactions with O2. J. Phys. Chem. A 2014, 118 (1), 21-37. 30. Coniglio, L.; Bennadji, H.; Glaude, P. A.; Herbinet, O.; Billaud, F., Combustion Chemical Kinetics of Biodiesel and Related Compounds (Methyl and Ethyl Esters): Experiments and Modeling – Advances and Future Refinements. Prog. Energy Comb. Sci. 2013, 39 (4), 340-382. 31. Bax, S.; Hakka, M. H.; Glaude, P. A.; Herbinet, O.; Battin-Leclerc, F., Experimental Study of the Oxidation of Methyl Oleate in a Jet-Stirred Reactor. Combust. Flame 2010, 157 (6), 1220-1229. 32. Welz, O.; Zador, J.; Savee, J. D.; Sheps, L.; Osborn, D. L.; Taatjes, C. A., Low-Temperature Combustion Chemistry of N-Butanol: Principal Oxidation Pathways of Hydroxybutyl Radicals. J. Phys. Chem. A 2013, 117 (46), 11983-2001. 33. Bakali, A. E.; Braun-Unkhoff, M.; Dagaut, P.; Frank, P.; Cathonnet, M., Detailed Kinetic Reaction Mechanism for Cyclohexane Oxidation at Pressure up to Ten Atmospheres. Proc. Combust. Inst. 2000, 28, 1631-1638. 34. Silke, E. J.; Pitz, W. J.; Westbrook, C. K.; Ribaucour, M., Detailed Chemical Kinetic Modeling of Cyclohexane Oxidation. J. Phys. Chem. A 2007, 111 (19), 3761-3775. 35. Serinyel, Z.; Herbinet, O.; Frottier, O.; Dirrenberger, P.; Warth, V.; Glaude, P. A.; Battin-Leclerc, F., An Experimental and Modeling Study of the Low- and High-Temperature Oxidation of Cyclohexane. Combust. Flame 2013, 160 (11), 2319-2332. 36. Fernandes, R. X.; Zador, J.; Jusinski, L. E.; Miller, J. A.; Taatjes, C. A., Formally Direct Pathways and Low-Temperature Chain Branching in Hydrocarbon Autoignition: The Cyclohexyl + O2 Reaction at High Pressure. Phys Chem Chem Phys 2009, 11 (9), 1320-1327. 37. Knepp, A. M.; Meloni, G.; Jusinski, L. E.; Taatjes, C. A.; Cavallotti, C.; Klippenstein, S. J., Theory, Measurements, and Modeling of Oh and Ho2 Formation in the Reaction of Cyclohexyl Radicals with O2. Phys Chem Chem Phys 2007, 9 (31), 4315-4331. 38. Telfah, H.; Reza, M. A.; Alam, J.; Paul, A. C.; Liu, J., Direct Observation of Tetrahydrofuranyl and Tetrahydropyranyl Peroxy Radicals Via Cavity Ring-Down Spectroscopy. J. Phys. Chem. Lett. 2018, 9 (16), 4475-4480. 39. Dagaut, P.; McGuinness, M.; Simmie, J. M.; Cathonnet, M., The Ignition and Oxidation of Tetrahydropyran: Experiments and Kinetic Modeling. Comb. Sci. Tech. 1997, 129 (1-6), 1-16. 40. Labbe, N. J.; Seshadri, V.; Kasper, T.; Hansen, N.; Oßwald, P.; Westmoreland, P. R., Flame Chemistry of Tetrahydropyran as a Model Heteroatomic Biofuel. Proc. Combust. Inst. 2013, 34 (1), 259267. 41. Osborn, D. L.; Zou, P.; Johnsen, H.; Hayden, C. C.; Taatjes, C. A.; Knyazev, V. D.; North, S. W.; Peterka, D. S.; Ahmed, M.; Leone, S. R., The Multiplexed Chemical Kinetic Photoionization Mass Spectrometer: A New Approach to Isomer-Resolved Chemical Kinetics. Rev. Sci. Inst. 2008, 79 (10), 104103-10. 42. Baklanov, A. V.; Krasnoperov, L. N., Oxalyl Chloridea Clean Source of Chlorine Atoms for Kinetic Studies. J. Phys. Chem. A 2001, 105 (1), 97-103. 43. Ghosh, B.; Papanastasiou, D. K.; Burkholder, J. B., Oxalyl Chloride, Clc(O)C(O)Cl: Uv/Vis Spectrum and Cl Atom Photolysis Quantum Yields at 193, 248, and 351 nm. J. Chem. Phys. 2012, 137 (16), 164315. 44. Ballesteros, B.; Ceacero-Vega, A. A.; Garzón, A.; Jiménez, E.; Albaladejo, J., Kinetics and Mechanism of the Tropospheric Reaction of Tetrahydropyran with Cl Atoms. J. Photochem. Photobio. A: Chem. 2009, 208 (2–3), 186-194. 45. Heimann, P. A.; Koike, M.; Hsu, C. W.; Blank, D.; Yang, X. M.; Suits, A. G.; Lee, Y. T.; Evans, M.; Ng, C. Y.; Flaim, C., et al., Performance of the Vacuum Ultraviolet High-Resolution and High-Flux Page 26 of 28 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
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