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A: Spectroscopy, Molecular Structure, and Quantum Chemistry
Jet-Cooled Spectroscopy of Ortho-Hydroxycyclohexadienyl Radicals Callan M. Wilcox, Olha Krechkivska, Klaas Nauta, Timothy W. Schmidt, and Scott H. Kable J. Phys. Chem. A, Just Accepted Manuscript • DOI: 10.1021/acs.jpca.8b07603 • Publication Date (Web): 12 Oct 2018 Downloaded from http://pubs.acs.org on October 15, 2018
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The Journal of Physical Chemistry
Jet-Cooled Spectroscopy of ortho-Hydroxycyclohexadienyl Radicals Callan M. Wilcox, Olha Krechkivska, Klaas Nauta, Timothy W. Schmidt, and Scott H. Kable∗ School of Chemistry, University of New South Wales, New South Wales 2052, Australia E-mail:
[email protected] 1
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1
Abstract
The electronic spectra of the ortho-hydroxycyclohexadienyl radical have been observed following the supersonic expansion of the electric discharge products of phenol and water. Hydrogen atoms, split from water, add to the phenol ring at the ortho position, generating syn and anti rotamers with respect to the hydroxyl group. The D1 ← D0 transitions were recorded by resonance-enhanced multiphoton ionisation spectroscopy. The spectrum of each isomer was isolated through hole burning spectroscopy. The assignment and symmetry of the excited state is evaluated through ab initio calculations and is employed to assign each spectrum. Both rotamers are calculated to have a puckered ring in the excited state, leading to C1 symmetry. The spectrum of the anti isomer is assigned well using this symmetry; however the syn isomer is assigned better in the Cs symmetry of the ground state. We use Duschinsky matrices as a tool for the spectroscopist to determine which point group to use when ab initio calculations are ambiguous.
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2
Introduction
Aromatic compounds are released to the atmosphere via many pathways, both anthropogenic and natural. 1,2 They comprise a large fraction of fuels, for example the Australian standard allows for up to 30% aromatics by weight, and they account for as much as 20-30% of the urban volatile organic compound budget to the atmosphere. The atmospheric oxidation of aromatics, such as benzene and its methylated derivatives, leads to enhanced tropospheric ozone concentrations and photochemical smog. 3 Their ability to form secondary organic aerosols (SOA) is an expanding area of recent study, and are predicted to generate significant quantities of SOA within urban environments. 4–8 The reactivity of benzene is relatively low compared to other substituted aromatics, and hence its atmospheric half-life is long, lasting up to several weeks before reaction. 4 Degradation is initiated chiefly by reaction with the hydroxyl radical, which proceeds through two key mechanisms, depending on temperature; 3,9–11
C6 H6 + OH −−→ C6 H6 OH −−→ C6 H5 + H2 O
(1) (2)
At atmospherically relevant temperatures, the addition reaction (1) dominates, forming a C6 H6 OH adduct, the ipso-hydroxycyclohexadienyl radical (i-chdOH). The rest of the atmospheric degradation mechanism is being continually improved. 12 A number of mechanistic studies have been performed on this radical, with intermediate products and reaction channels showing a clear dependence on ambient NO and NO2 concentrations. 4,5,8,13,14 Subsequent reactions involve removal of hydrogen by molecular oxygen abstraction, resulting in formation of phenol + HO2 . 3,9,14–16 The ring breaking and propagating mechanisms of fur-
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ther oxidation have been studied, and believed to involve the formation of bicyclic species, via O2 addition across the phenol aromatic ring. 2,17 For temperatures above ∼325 K, the chdOH radical becomes unstable and readily decays back to reactants (benzene + OH or phenol + H), while for even higher temperatures (combustion-relevant, T > 500 K) the reaction almost exclusively follows a hydrogen abstraction mechanism, reaction (2), forming phenyl and H2 O. 18 This abstraction channel, accounting for only ∼5% tropospheric benzene oxidation is comparably well understood 19 and its intermediates have been successfully observed and identified in an argon matrix by Mardyukov et al. 20 Clear progress has been made in the understanding of the degradation pathways of benzene and other alkyl substituted aromatics, under different temperature and varied ambient molecular concentrations. However top-down (measuring aerosol concentrations) and bottom-up (productions of aerosols from known compounds) approaches to SOA formations vary by an order of magnitude in their carbon balance. 5,7 In a matrix study of the benzene-hydroxyl complex, Mardyukov et al. observed the formation of ketene products and proposed a new mechanism, involving o-chdOH as an intermediate, as shown in figure 1. 21 As discussed above, in the troposphere the i-chdOH (1i) radical is able to form products (2), usually via O2 abstraction. In the matrix, a complex between phenol and H atom can be trapped and proceed to form the o-chdOH adduct, (1o). Intramolecular hydrogen migration from (1i) to form the (1o) radical was ruled out due to its high-barrier. Since none of the intermediates were directly observed in this study, however, this mechanism remains speculative. It does nonetheless well illustrate the importance of the o-chdOH radical in the chemistry of the benzene + OH/phenol + H system. A recent paper by our group described how hydrogen atom addition to phenol is ortho directed. 22 An absorption spectrum taken of the first excited state revealed a complicated spectrum, containing numerous peaks over an extended range. An unexpectedly small spac-
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2 OH
O -H
+OH +H
H
O
H
C
-H H
OH
H
OH
OH H
-H
3
H H
1i
1o
Figure 1: Possible ring-breaking mechanism from the ipso-hydroxycyclohexadienyl radical. A scheme of ketene formation from an initial OH-addition to benzene yielding 1i. 21 The dotted line emphasises that the hydrogen migration pathway from 1i to 1o is energetically unfavourable. 22 The favored matrixmechanism suggested by Mardyukov is indicated by the blue arrows.
ing between the first two peaks of only 18 cm−1 led us to conclude that the spectrum contained more than a single compound. Further investigation determined that these species were conformers of the same structural isomer, the syn and anti conformers of (1o). No other H addition isomers; ipso, (1i), meta (1m) or para (1p) were detected. In that paper, we reported potential the energy landscape for the torsion of the hydroxyl group. The anti rotamer was found to be the lowest energy configuration, by ∼450 cm−1 compared to syn. The conformers are separated by a barrier of ∼1750 cm−1 (measured from the anti well). The hydrogen addition entrance channel is assumed to be similar for the two rotamers, especially when compared to the entrance channels forming ipso, meta and para hydroxycyclohexadienyls. Kinetically, we would thus expect the formation of both rotamers. Thermodynamically, formation of the lower energy anti configuration would be preferred, and so any system where equilibrium could be reached would favor an increased population in the anti rotamer. Lifetime measurements and ionisations potentials were also reported.
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In this contribution we examine the detailed spectroscopy of these ortho-chdOH isomers and evaluate the theoretical methods and approximations used to assign their spectra. Recently, the Wright group has highlighted the effectiveness of using Duschinsky rotation matrices to enable a consistent labelling scheme of vibrational modes between substituted benzene rings. 23 Their method has also been effective in labelling the vibrational modes of the ground state, S0 , excited state, S1 and cation D0+ vibrations in a consistent manner, preserving the mode labels. 24 Here we also utilize Duschinsky rotation matrices to consistently label the D1 vibrations of the syn and anti conformers, by their respective D0 labels, and extend their use for identification of the symmetry of the excited electronic state.
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3
Experimental
A description of the experimental apparatus for these experiments has been published in more detail previously. 25 Here, we describe the experiments in general terms, including details that are specific to this work. Argon (6-7 bar) was bubbled through a sample of phenol (Aldrich, ≥99%), heated to ∼ 45◦ C, and H2 O, resulting in a seeded gas mix of ∼0.1-1% organic and ∼1% water. The sample was expanded into a differentially-pumped vacuum chamber through a pulsed discharge nozzle. The discharge (1.6 kV, 25 kΩ) is struck for ∼80 - 130 µs to coincide with the latter part of expanding sample. A discharge in argon, with trace amounts of water has been shown to be an effective way of producing H and OH radicals; occurring through collisions with metastable argon. 25 The discharge products were cooled to ∼10 K in a supersonic expansion, and the coldest part of this expansion was passed through a 2 mm skimmer. The molecular beam entered the ionization chamber, where the molecules were interrogated using resonance enhanced multi-photon ionization (REMPI) spectroscopy, which, here, utilised up to three counter-propagating laser beams. Tunable light was provided by Nd:YAG pumped dye lasers. For normal REMPI experiments, the excitation laser, near 550 nm, utilised Coumarin 540A dye. The ionisation laser, at 230 nm, was the frequency doubled output of a dye laser using Coumarin 460 dye. The resulting cations are orthogonally accelerated down the length of a Wiley-McLaren-type time-of-flight mass spectrometer (ToF-MS), detected by a tandem multi-channel plate (MCP) and viewed by an oscilloscope. Custom-written LabView software was used to record the spectra. A wavemeter was used to calibrate laser wavelengths. For hole burning experiments, a third laser (dye laser with Coumarin 540A dye) was introduced around 100 ns before the REMPI lasers, and scanned through the entire absorption spectrum. The hole burning spectrum is recorded as loss of REMPI signal as a function of burn laser wavelength.
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Theory
The geometries of the syn and anti conformers of o-chdOH radical in the ground electronic state were calculated using density functional theory (DFT) at B3LYP/6-311+G(d,p) level of theory due to its relatively low cost and reasonable accuracy. All calculations were computed utilizing the GAUSSIAN-16 suite of programs. 26 The ground state geometries for both syn and anti conformers have Cs symmetry at this level of theory, as shown in figure 2.
syn ground state
anti excited state
ground state
excited state
Figure 2: Profile and top down views of ground and excited states of syn and anti chdOH radicals, showcasing the geometry change and the near-planar nature of the excited syn geometry. These geometries were optimised at the (TD) – B3LYP/6-311+G(d,p) level of theory.
Time-dependent density functional theory (TD-DFT) was used for calculating the structure and harmonic vibrational frequencies in the excited states (B3LYP/6-311+G(d,p)). The electronic transition is of a double excitation nature, where one electron moves from the HOMO (π) into the SOMO(n), and another from the SOMO(n) into the LUMO (π*). Upon excitation for both conformers, the functionalised part of the framework is prone to puckering, and torsion of the hydroxyl group occurs, resulting in formal C1 symmetry. However, the magnitudes of these changes are quite different for each conformer. The results of these calculations can be seen in figure 2. 8
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The syn conformer, undergoes minimal distortion upon electronic excitation. Excited state calculations carried out without a diffuse function (6-311G(d,p)) yielded a Cs excited state. Upon addition of this diffuse function, however the excited state became C1 geometry. Imposing a symmetry constraint of Cs geometry yielded a single imaginary frequency, corresponding to the CO carbon puckering out-of-plane. We also note that the sp3 hybridised carbon and OH groups rotate and subtly distort to oppose this puckering. The excited state is thus assigned by the software as C1 . For the anti conformer, on the other hand, a significant geometry change occurs involving the hydroxyl group. The oxygen bends out-of-plane by ∼16◦ and the respective H atom increases its dihedral angle to the framework by ∼6.5◦ . The ring-carbon bound to this hydroxyl group also puckers out-of-plane. The vibrational modes that contain these prominent out-of-plane distortions are likely to show significant Franck-Condon activity. Minor out-ofplane distortions of some ring-CH hydrogens also occur as do small in-plane distortions of CC bonds around the ring also occur. Frequencies calculated for both the ground and excited states of the syn and anti isomers can be seen in tables 1 and 2 respectively. Ground state frequencies have been scaled by a factor of 0.9688, suggested by Merrick et al., as very tight convergence criteria were applied to the geometry optimization. 27 The excited state was scaled by the same factor. The largest difference in vibrational frequencies between the conformers lies in the lowest frequency modes, which is helpful in distinguishing between the isomers. The ground state harmonic zero-point energy for the anti rotamer, based on our calculated frequencies, table 1, is higher than that of syn by ∼130 cm−1 , table 2. This has the effect of reducing the energy difference between the rotamers from ∼450 cm−1 to ∼320 cm−1 .
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Table 1: Ground and excited state frequency calculations for the syn conformer of the chdOH radical, at the (TD)-B3LYP/6-311+G(d,p) level of theory. Frequencies are labelled according to the Cs point group of the ground state, where the excited state has been reordered according to the Duschinsky matrix (see text). Scaled frequencies (×0.9688) are included for comparison. Ground State
syn
Excited State
Symmetry
Frequency
Scaled Frequency
Frequency
Scaled Frequency
1
a′
3836
3716
3809
3691
OH stretch
2
a
′
3199
3100
3165
3067
CH stretch
3
a′
3179
3080
3206
3106
CH stretch
4
a
′
3176
3077
3218
3118
CH stretch
5
a
′
3157
3059
3191
3092
CH stretch
6
a′
2896
2806
2922
2831
CH2 sym stretch
7
a′
1635
1584
1583
1533
CC stretch
8
a
′
1552
1504
1448
1403
CC stretch
9
a′
1451
1406
1394
1351
CH2 scissors
10
a′
1441
1396
1432
1387
CH ip bend/CC stretch
11
a′
1435
1391
1377
1334
CH ip bend/CC stretch
12
a
′
1362
1320
1333
1291
CH/OH ip bend
13
a
′
1312
1271
1543
1495
CH2 ip bend
14
a′
1238
1200
1235
1196
CO stretch
15
a
′
1193
1156
1174
1138
OH ip bend
16
a
′
1183
1146
1160
1124
CH ip bend
17
a′
1125
1090
1135
1100
CH ip bend
18
a
1006
975
1019
987
ring breathe
19
a′
974
944
961
931
ip ring deformation
20
a′
933
904
929
900
ring breathe
21
a
′
780
756
631
611
ip ring deformation
22
a′
586
567
759
735
ip ring deformation
23
a′
497
481
539
522
ip ring deformation
24
a
392
379
382
371
CO ip bend
25
a′′
2880
2791
2949
2858
CH2 asym stretch
26
a′′
1184
1147
1104
1069
CH2 twist
27
a′′
956
927
718
696
CH oop bend
28
a′′
936
907
795
771
CH2 oop rock
29
a
′′
894
866
944
915
CH oop bend
30
a′′
743
719
517
501
CH oop bend
31
a
′′
661
640
476
461
CH oop bend
32
a
′′
516
500
468
453
oop ring deformation
33
a′′
443
429
205
198
oop ring deformation
34
a′′
285
277
148
143
oop ring deformation
35
a′′
156
151
324
314
OH oop bend
36
a
119
116
91
88
CH2 oop rock
′
′
′′
(a) ip = in-plane;
oop = out-of-plane
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Mode Description
(a)
Mode #
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Table 2: Ground and excited state frequency calculations for the anti conformer of the chdOH radical, at the (TD)-B3LYP/6-311+G(d,p) level of theory. Frequencies are labelled according to the Cs point group of the ground state, where the excited state has been reordered according to the Duschinsky matrix (see text). Scaled frequencies (×0.9688) are included for comparison. Ground State
anti
Excited State
Mode #
Symmetry
Frequency
Scaled Frequency
Frequency
Scaled Frequency
Mode Description(a)
1
a′
3811
3692
3627
3514
OH stretch
2
a
′
3198
3098
3152
3054
CH stretch
3
a′
3176
3078
3200
3100
CH stretch
4
a
′
3157
3059
3175
3077
CH stretch
5
a
′
3138
3040
3181
3082
CH stretch
6
a
′
2934
2842
2951
2859
CH2 sym stretch
7
a′
1624
1573
1549
1501
CC stretch
8
a
′
1545
1497
1433
1389
CC stretch
9
a
′
1461
1415
1450
1405
CC stretch
10
a′
1449
1404
1359
1317
CH2 scissors
11
a′
1434
1389
1399
1355
CH ip bend
12
a
′
1364
1321
1308
1267
CH ip bend
13
a
′
1316
1275
1575
1526
CH2 ip bend
14
a′
1257
1218
1228
1190
CO stretch
15
a
′
1182
1145
1183
1146
CH ip bend
16
a
′
1174
1138
1157
1121
OH ip bend
17
a′
1127
1092
1143
1108
CH ip bend
18
a
′
1010
978
1024
992
CC stretch
19
a
′
975
945
974
943
ip ring deformation
20
a′
929
900
930
901
ring breathe
21
a
′
783
759
764
740
ring breathe
22
a
′
586
568
549
532
ip ring deformation
23
a
′
500
484
481
466
ip ring deformation
24
a′
397
384
392
380
CO ip bend
25
a
′′
2925
2834
2994
2901
CH2 asym stretch
′′
26
a
1183
1147
1097
1063
CH2 twist
27
a′′
956
926
759
735
CH oop bend
28
a′′
937
908
793
768
CH2 oop rock
29
a
′′
863
836
579
561
CH oop bend
30
a′′
736
713
948
919
CH oop bend
31
a′′
657
637
572
554
CH oop bend
32
a
′′
517
501
460
445
oop ring deformation
33
a
′′
457
443
299
289
oop ring deformation
34
a′′
403
391
350
339
OH oop bend
35
a
′′
279
270
178
173
oop ring deformation
36
a
′′
131
127
50
48
CH2 oop rock
(a) ip = in-plane;
oop = out-of-plane
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4.1
Duschinsky Mixing
The ground state frequencies in tables 1 and 2 are labelled according to the Mulliken convention. For a molecule with Cs symmetry, we first label the a′ modes in order of decreasing frequency, followed by the a′′ modes in a similar fashion. The excited state frequencies in the tables, however, appear to be more random in order, and this section will be used to clarify. Upon excitation, the geometry of the syn and anti configurations distort, as seen in figure 2. The frequencies and character of each mode therefore change, impacting the order and description. To label the excited state modes, in the basis of the ground state modes, Duschinsky matrices were constructed, using the FCLab II Software. 28 We have previously used such matrices to assign excited state modes of the 1-phenylpropargyl radical and found they worked favourably. 29 A Duschinsky matrix is constructed by taking scalar product of the mass-corrected displacements of each normal mode in the ground state with each of those in the excited state. This results in a 3N-6 × 3N-6 matrix where all matrix elements represent the overlap integral between modes in the ground and excited states. In figure 3, the matrix elements are coloured according to this scalar product, where 0 is represented by white, 1 by black, and a linear greyscale between the two. In the case where the geometry change is minimal, and all modes in the excited state directly correlate to those in the ground state, a diagonal matrix would be generated. The necessity for a new labelling convention becomes apparent when we consider how the modes change in frequency, and hence order, upon excitation, as shown in figure 3. Here, the modes in the ground and excited state are labelled simply in decreasing frequency order, straight from a GAUSSIAN output file. There exists a large number of off-diagonal elements in figure 3. As a result, the excited state labels become inconsistent with the ground state for the majority of modes. For ′
example, for the anti isomer, the excited state mode ν19 has a near perfect overlap with
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syn
anti
1.0
0.8
Ground State
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0.6
ν’’18 ν’’16
0.4
ν’19 ν’19
0.2
0.0
Excited State
Excited State
Figure 3: Duschinsky matrices for the syn isomer (left) and the anti isomer (right). Both the ground and excited state modes are labelled according to the Mulliken convention assuming a C1 point group. Matrix elements are shown in a linear greyscale, where white represents 0 and black represents 1. ′′
ground state mode ν16 , indicated by the blue lines, inferring that these two different labels represent the same molecular motion, but are of a different relative frequency order. This ′
′′
is also apparent for the syn isomer, where ν19 has a near perfect overlap with ν18 . Other than this direct mode relabelling, the purple boxes emphasise a binary or ternary mode ′′
′′
′
′
relabelling, e.g. ν6 , ν7 → ν7 , ν6 for both isomers, indicating the labels of these modes should be swapped for the excited state. Further, the modes within green boxes represent an extensive scrambling, where no ground state mode label is correctly represented by its corresponding excited state label. To rectify these labelling inconsistencies, and to label similar vibrations with the same label, we have rearranged the excited state frequency order, to best form a diagonal matrix. This maps modes with similar character in the excited state onto the same label in the ground state and makes the spectral labelling much more consistent. In order to prevent confusion when talking about the original C1 excited state labels the prefix ‘or-’ will be used. Before the excited state is dealt with, the ground state modes are reordered according to
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Mulliken convention for a molecule with Cs symmetry. Boxes emphasising the ground state symmetry labels have been drawn on the matrices in figure 4, which will be discussed later. For each matrix in figure 4, the excited state column headings list both the original unordered (C1 ) labelling from figure 3, and the final labelling after diagonalization. This labelling convention ensures that when discussing a vibrational mode in the excited state, we can draw direct comparison with the same (or most similar) mode in the ground state. It should be noted that non-zero off-diagonal elements do not represent a coupling between these two modes upon electronic excitation. Rather, they signify the excited state normal mode contains character of more than one ground state normal mode. The reordered Duschinsky matrix for the syn isomer is displayed on the left in figure 4. A quick comparison between the original (C1 ) and final (Cs ) mode labels emphasises the need for a reordered matrix, as only three mode labels, (ν1 , ν3 and ν36 ), have been retained. Two ′
′
modes, ν25 and ν32 , are calculated to contain significant character of ground state modes with different symmetry, which will be discussed later. Apart from these two modes, the symmetry of the remainder of modes is preserved upon excitation. From this plot, we can see that the majority of excited state modes can be mapped clearly onto the ground state basis. In several cases, however, this mapping is not evident with two excited state modes calculated to contain a large component of the same ground state mode. For the syn isomer, as seen on the left in figure 4, this occurred three times. ′
′
Excited state modes or-ν18 and or-ν16 originally had their largest matrix element mapping ′′
′
to ground state mode ν17 , shown by the green dotted lines in the left of figure 4; or-ν18 ′′
however had a larger element and was thus matched with ν17 . We then considered the next ′
′′
highest unassigned element of or-ν16 which was that of ν15 , and after confirmation upon ′
′
visual inspection, assigned accordingly. Modes or-ν13 and or-ν12 underwent a similar review, ′
′′
′
indicated by the blue dotted lines, resulting in mode or-ν12 being assigned to ν9 , and or-ν13 ′′
′
′
to mode ν11 . The original modes or-ν9 and or-ν8 also both contained a dominant character ′
′
from ν7 , indicated by the purple dotted lines. As or-ν8 contained the largest character, mode
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syn
anti
a”
1.0
a”
0.8
Ground State
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
a’
a’ 0.6
0.4
0.2
0.0
Excited State
Excited State
Figure 4: Duschinsky matrix for the syn (left) and anti (right) isomers. The ground states have been labelled according to traditional Mulliken convention for Cs molecules. The excited state axes exhibit both the original Mulliken convention (as though the excited states were C1 ), and the the new numbering after the matrices were diagonalised with their respective Cs ground state. Matrix elements are shown in a linear greyscale, where white represents 0 and black represents 1. ′
′′
′′
or-ν9 was reassigned by its 3rd highest overlap with ν13 , as the 2nd highest (ν8 ) already had a well-defined diagonal element. In cases like this, the label loses meaning with respect to ground state modes and becomes just a label. Similar to the the syn matrix, only four labels remained unmodified following the rotation of the anti matrix, (here ν1 , ν4 , ν35 and ν36 ), shown in the right of figure 4. Upon ′
′
electronic excitation, 8 of the 12 modes between ν25 - ν36 , which were of a′′ symmetry in the ground state, are calculated to contain character of ground state modes with both a′ and a′′ symmetries. This is significantly more scrambling than observed for the syn isomer and will be discussed later in reference to the excited state symmetries of both isomers. The anti isomer, also contained three elements with non-unique ground states, which can ′
′′
be seen on the right in figure 4. Mode or-ν26 contains almost even character of ν21 (45%) ′′
′
and ν27 (43%), indicated by the green dotted lines. Original mode or-ν25 has a 41% overlap ′′
′′
′
with ν21 , but only 25% with mode ν27 . As such, to maximise the diagonal, modes or-ν26 ′
′′
′′
′
′
and or-ν25 were assigned to modes ν27 and ν21 accordingly. Modes or-ν22 and or-ν27 were
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′′
′′
paired respectively with modes ν30 and ν29 in a similar fashion, indicated by the purple lines. ′
′
′′
′′
Finally, or-ν18 and or-ν16 were assigned as ν17 and ν15 by their overlap elements, indicated by the blue lines.
5
Results and Discussion
Figure 5 (upper trace) shows a REMPI spectrum of the m/z 95 compound created from the discharge of phenol and water seeded in argon. The excitation laser wavelength was scanned between 18150 and 19250 cm−1 , whilst the ionization laser was fixed near 43500 cm−1 . This spectrum has been assigned previously to both the syn and anti conformers of the o-chdOH radical, with the electronic origin of the anti conformer at 18200 cm−1 and the syn conformer at 18218 cm−1 . 22 The difference between the origin peak intensities of syn and anti conformers is ∼1:3 respectively. In our previous paper, 22 the oscillator strength of the anti transition was calculated to be about twice as strong as syn. Therefore, assuming that the Franck-Condon factors of the origin transitions are similar, we estimate relative population of the conformers in the molecular beam to be 1:1.5 for syn:anti. As discussed in the theory section, the zeropoint energy of the anti conformer lies 320 cm−1 lower than syn with a 1750 cm−1 barrier from the anti well. A direct count of the harmonic density of states at an energy corresponding to the top of the barrier, using the frequencies in tables 1 and 2, reveals a higher density for the anti conformer over syn by 1.5:1. Therefore the observed relative populations are consistent with the radical being formed from H + phenol, falling into two wells that lie ∼ 121 kJ mol−1 (10,100 cm−1 ) below the entrance channel barrier. 22 In cooling, the new radicals stabilise into the syn and anti wells according to the density of the states at the top of the syn - anti barrier, and are frozen in their respective structures. Hole burning spectroscopy was employed to untangle the contributions of the two conformers. The excitation laser was tuned to the 18200 cm−1 transition for the anti isomer,
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The Journal of Physical Chemistry
Wavenumber (cm-1) 18200
18400
18600
19000
18800
19200
H O H H
a'' vibrations
000
0
3410 3610
3420
2410
a' vibrations
100
200
3320 3410 3510
3310 3410
300
400
2310 3310 3410
2210 2420
2310
500
600
700
1810
800
900
1000
Relative Wavenumber (cm-1) Figure 5: (Upper) REMPI spectrum of ortho-chdOH radical. (Lower) Hole burning (depletion) spectrum measured while monitoring the REMPI signal 18219 cm−1 . The spectrum is assigned to the syn conformer. Vibrational assignments are indicated in blue font for a′ vibrations and black font for a′′ vibrations.
and a third laser, timed ∼100 ns prior to the REMPI lasers, was scanned across the same spectral range. All transitions with a ground state in common with the 18200 cm−1 peak appear as a depletion in the REMPI signal. The hole burning experiment was repeated for the peak at 18218 cm−1 for the syn isomer. These two experiments give rise to the depletion traces, reflected at the bottom, in figures 5 and 6, (figure 6 is shown later in the paper). The parent peak intensity was depleted by at most 40%.
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Page 18 of 33
In assigning the spectra, we give priority to peaks in the REMPI spectrum; the signal-tonoise is better, and intensities are more reliable. In all cases, peaks in the REMPI spectrum have counterparts in the depletion spectrum. However there are instances where apparent peaks appear in the depletion spectrum with no REMPI counterpart, which might arise from other experimental artefacts. Any peak that appears solely in one of the hole burning experiments is labelled ‘?’ and not assigned. The hole burning experiment attributed just 12 peaks (including the origin) of the m/z 95 spectrum to the syn conformer. This is far fewer than were attributed to the anti conformer (the remaining lines, justified in figure 6). As described in the theory section, the symmetry of the excited syn conformer was sensitive to the inclusion of a diffuse functional in the calculations. By an evaluation of the Duschinsky matrices, in figure 4, we can investigate the preservation of symmetry upon excitation, to explore the possibility that a higher symmetry is responsible for the fewer peaks, due to symmetry selection rules. As mentioned previously, the syn conformer undergoes a very small geometric distortion upon excitation, when calculated at the 6-311+G(d,p) level, breaking its plane of symmetry. In figure 4, boxes of symmetry are drawn to help us understand how well the symmetry is preserved upon excitation. For the syn conformer, left in the figure, we can see that almost every matrix element lies within the two boxes, indicating that they retain the same symmetry character of their respective ground state mode. There are a couple of significant non-zero matrix elements that require further evaluation. ′′
′′
The ground state symmetric (ν6 ) and asymmetric (ν25 ) CH2 scissoring motions show significant mixing. Animation of these modes reveals that the symmetric and anti-symmetric stretches in the planar ground state have become two local CH stretching modes in the distorted excited state. This local mode formation is also apparent for the anti rotamer, and ′′
′′
can be seen in the Duschinsky matrix in figure 4; where the same two modes, ν6 and ν25 , exhibit significant mixing following excitation.
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The Journal of Physical Chemistry
The unscaled local modes for the two CH vibrations in the syn rotamer have frequencies of 2922 cm−1 and 2949 cm−1 . In order to test the coupling of the two modes, each of the hydrogens in the CH2 group was substituted in turn with deuterium, and the calculations were re-run for each of the isotopologues. The two local CH vibrations were calculated to have frequencies of 2921 cm−1 and 2950 cm−1 , which compare well to the CH2 local mode frequencies above, indicating that they are indeed nearly uncoupled. The formation of local modes which break the symmetry of the molecule has been observed previously by Kemp et al. In their studies on meta-disubstituted benzenes, they observed that upon increasing the mass of one substituent, the symmetric and asymmetric stretches of the C-X bonds (where X represents the substituent) eventually became local modes, where only one stretching mode was active, and the other near stationary, and vice versa. 30 ′
Another, smaller, anomaly is mode ν32 , which contains character of both the a′′ mode ′′
ν32 (60%) and a′ mode ν23 (19%). Upon visual inspection, this mode is clearly dominated by the asymmetric out-of-plane ring distortion, along with large amplitudes of CH/CH2 /OH wag. The mode retains some small character of an in-plane elongation/contraction of the ring, and may excite in single quantum. The excited state of the syn conformer therefore preserves the majority of vibrational mode symmetry. We expect the vibronic transitions for this conformer will be subject to Cs selection rules, that is, only transitions of overall a′ symmetry are allowed. The Duschinsky matrix for the anti isomer, (right in figure 4), shows more extensive mixing between the a′ and a′′ modes upon electronic excitation. This is consistent with the larger distortion observed in the excited state geometry. We attribute the larger number of peaks in the anti spectrum to arise from the lowering of symmetry from Cs to C1 and the consequent relaxation of symmetry selection rules. In C1 symmetry, transitions involving all vibrations are allowed.
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5.1
Page 20 of 33
The Syn Conformer
As discussed above, by an evaluation of the Duschinsky matrix, the structure of the excited state of the syn conformer is effectively of Cs symmetry. We therefore start by assigning the vibrational structure in the spectrum in the Cs point group, where a′ modes are Franck-Condon active and a′′ modes appear only as even overtones and combinations. The calculated and scaled frequencies for the syn isomer, along with their respective symmetries are displayed in table 1. The electronic origin for this transition, 000 , is observed at 18218 cm−1 , and this transition was used as the ‘burn’ transition for the depletion spectrum, shown in the lower panel of figure 5. The assignments are displayed in table 3. Table 3: Excitation frequencies for the Syn conformer, relative to the origin transition (18218 cm−1 ), their assignments and comparison with theory. All units are in wavenumbers (cm−1 ). The theoretical values for the a′′ modes are not strictly from the TD-B3LYP output, see text.
Observed
Assignment
Symmetry Label
Theory
∆T −O
0
000
215
3410 3610
a′′ ⊗ a′′
231
16
274
3420
2a′′
286
12
356
3310 3410
a′′ ⊗ a′′
348
-8
373
2410
a′
371
-2
421
3320
2a′′
396
-25
461
3410 3510
a′′ ⊗ a′′
451
-10
522
2310
a′
522
0
731
2210
a′
735
4
734
2420
2a′
742
8
873
2310 3310 3410
a′ ⊗ a′′ ⊗ a′′
878
5
988
1810
a′
987
-1
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The Journal of Physical Chemistry
′
We begin our assignment with the a′ modes. The lowest frequency a′ mode, ν24 , is the in-plane C-C-O bend, calculated at 371 cm−1 , which is an excellent match with a mediumstrong transition displaced +373 cm−1 from the origin transition of the syn conformer and therefore assigned as such. We can then assign the next lowest a′ transition, 2310 , predicted and observed at +522 cm−1 . There is a doublet at +731 and +734 cm−1 . One of these is likely ′
to involve the ring-breathing mode, ν22 , calculated to have an excited state frequency of 735 cm−1 . The other band likely contains the overtone 2420 . In the harmonic limit, this overtone would appear at twice its fundamental, +742 cm−1 . This overtone is uncharacteristically strong for an origin dominated spectra, and likely forms a Fermi resonance with mode 2210 . If the overtone is indeed anharmonic, this reduction in the frequency is reasonable. We therefore assign the lower frequency component at +731 cm−1 to 2210 and +734 cm−1 to 2420 , although the equal intensity of the two components suggests almost complete mixing of the two wavefunctions. Finally, the ring breathe and CH bend of 1810 , predicted at 987 cm−1 is ′
′
observed just 1 cm−1 higher. Single quantum transitions in modes ν19 - ν21 are not observed. ′
′
The asymmetric, out-of-plane modes, ν33 - ν36 , are all involved in the change in geometry from the ground to excited state, and many exhibit Franck-Condon activity as overtones and combinations. None of these modes are assigned as a single quantum transition. This reaffirms our evaluation from the Duschinsky matrix analysis, which reinforces that the excited state has Cs symmetry, as the transitions of the syn conformer adhere to the corresponding Cs selection rules. The next step is to determine the low frequency a′′ overtones, in order to derive their fundamental frequency from assignments of combination bands. These revised frequencies are then used when determining the position of combination bands, rather than the original TDB3LYP values. The band observed at +274 cm−1 is assigned to the overtone 3420 . Assuming ′
that the mode is harmonic, the frequency of the fundamental vibration, ν34 , is determined to be 137 cm−1 , some 6 cm−1 below the theoretically predicted value. The most appropriate assignment for the band at +421 cm−1 is the overtone 3320 , representing a large amplitude
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Page 22 of 33
′
out-of-plane ring distortion. Again, this implies that the ν33 fundamental vibration has a frequency of ∼211 cm−1 , which is somewhat larger than the theoretically predicted value of 198 cm−1 . We now turn to the other low frequency unassigned bands, at +215 cm−1 , +356 cm−1 and +461 cm−1 . The first of these, at +215 cm−1 can only be assigned to the combination ′
3410 3610 , calculated to be 16 cm−1 higher in frequency, at 231 cm−1 . As ν34 was determined ′
to be 137 cm−1 , this infers that ν38 = 78 cm−1 , which is 10 cm−1 lower than predicted. The band observed +356 cm−1 from the origin is not readily assigned. The closest assignment is the combination 3310 3410 . The fundamental frequencies of both modes were derived above, with frequencies of 137 cm−1 and 211 cm−1 respectively. The combination band would therefore lie at 348 cm−1 in the harmonic limit, indicating this combination has a strong positive anharmonicity. However, we have no better assignment. Finally, the band at +461 cm−1 is assigned to the combination 3410 3510 , predicted at 451 cm−1 . As 3410 has ′
been determined to be 137 cm−1 , this implies that ν35 = 324 cm−1 in the harmonic limit, 10 cm−1 higher than calculated. The only band remaining unassigned in the spectrum is at +873 cm−1 from the origin transition. This band cannot be assigned to any binary combinations, however it assigns well to the 2310 progression on 3310 3410 at 878 cm−1 , only 5 cm−1 higher than observed. This is the only band where multiple quanta of out-of-plane modes (3310 and 3410 ) are coupled to an in-plane mode (2310 ), involving a ring contraction and elongation. Overall there is an excellent agreement between the experimentally observed a′ modes and the scaled theoretical values, with a mean absolute deviation (MAD) of only 1.8 cm−1 (see table 4). The a′′ modes, however, are not as well predicted by this level of theory, with a MAD of 9.6 cm−1 . The shortfalls of TD-B3LYP in calculating out-of-plane modes accurately were also observed by Krechkivska et al. during their studies on protonated naphthalene. They compared their level of theory with the RI-CC2 method used by Alata et al. for the same cation and found the latter significantly superior in that case. 31,32
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The Journal of Physical Chemistry
Table 4: Comparison between single quanta observed/determined frequencies and TD-B3LYP theory, including the mean absolute deviation (MAD) for each of the a′ and a′′ modes, and the total. All units are in wavenumbers (cm−1 )
a′ mode
Observed
ν24
′
373
371
-2
ν23
′
522
522
0
ν22
′
731
734
4
′
988
987
-1
ν33
MADa′
1.8
ν18
TD-B3LYP ∆T −O
a′′ mode
Observed
TD-B3LYP ∆T −O
ν36
′
88
78
10
ν35
′
324
314
-10
ν34
′
137
143
6
′
210.5
198
-12.5
MADa′′
9.6
MADT OT
5.7
Reviewing the discrepancy between the out-of-plane combinations and the observed bands reveals that the a′′ modes appear to be very anharmonic. This spectroscopic evidence of anharmonicity agrees with the implications of the theoretical study, where different levels of theory and basis set size would converge to either planar and non-planar configurations, implying a very flat potential. The out-of-plane potential is likely anharmonic, or even of a pseudo-double minimum character. Introduction of a quartic term in the potential gives rise to alternating spacings in the vibrational coordinates and to positive anharmonicities, as observed. This is intimated in the experimental data, however there are not enough observed transitions to create an empirical fit of the potential. The ability of theory to successfully account for every peak within the hole burning spectrum ensures that this spectrum has been correctly assigned as the syn conformer of the ortho complex.
5.2
The Anti Conformer
The TD-DFT calculations, and an evaluation of the Duschinsky matrix for the excited state of the anti conformer, indicate C1 symmetry. With no symmetry, single quantum transitions
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Page 24 of 33
of all in- and out-of-plane modes are allowed. The electronic origin, 000 , is observed at 18200 cm−1 , and this transition was used as the ‘burn’ transition for the depletion spectrum, shown in the lower trace of figure 6. The recorded spectrum spans ∼1000 cm−1 and the calculated and scaled frequencies are displayed in table 2. We begin our assignment of the anti spectrum, as for the syn, by assigning the single quantum fundamental transitions, identified in figure 6 in the red font. These (and all) assignments for the anti isomer are displayed in table 5. The first band observed in the spectrum is at +168 cm−1 , which can only be assigned to the single quantum a′′ transition involving the out-of-plane CO bend and CH2 rock, 3510 , predicted at 173 cm−1 . The two peaks, at +281 cm−1 and +326 cm−1 are readily assigned to transitions in the out-of-plane modes 3310 and 3410, calculated at 289 cm−1 and 339 cm−1 respectively. These three transitions all contained a large overlap with ground state modes of a′′ character, see figure 4. The observation of these transitions in single quantum validate the theoretical evaluation of an excited state with C1 symmetry, contrary to that of the syn isomer. Considering the reduced symmetry in the excited state, single quantum transitions of the lowest frequency a′ and a′′ modes can be assigned to observed peaks based on proximity to ′
′
the theoretical calculations. Indeed, transitions in each of the a′ modes from ν24 - ν18 can ′
′
′
be readily assigned in this way. The out-of-plane a′′ modes ν35 - ν31 and ν27 are similarly ′
observed and assigned accordingly. The assignment of ν27 may at first look out of place, ′
′
however we recall that this is just a labelling convention and mode ν27 and ν21 are near ′′
′′
equivalent in their elements of ground state modes ν21 and ν27 . This is evidenced in the spectrum, as both bands are observed in single quantum only 7 cm−1 apart. The peak observed at +226 cm−1 must now be discussed for purposes of future assignment. It cannot be accounted for by a single quantum transition nor overtone. This peak ′
can only be assigned to the combination of the transitions 3510 and 3610 . As ν35 has been ′
determined above to be 168 cm−1 , this implies that the frequency of ν36 is ∼58 cm−1 in the ′
harmonic limit, some 10 cm−1 higher than theory. Although ν36 is not observed in single
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Wavenumber (cm-1) 18200
18400
18600
18800
19000
19200
H O H H
?
?
?
?
? 3402
3401 3601 3501 3601
3501
3502 3601
3201 3601 2201 3601 2301 3601
2402
3201 3301
2401 3501 3601 2401 3301
3301 3401 2401 3201 2301 2201
3202
2302
2701 3601 2201 3401
2001 1901
2701 2101
2701 3301
1801
000
0
100
200
300
400
500
600
700
800
900
1000
Relative Wavenumber (cm-1) Figure 6: (Upper) REMPI spectrum of ortho-chdOH radical. (Lower) Hole burning (depletion) spectrum measured while monitoring the REMPI signal 18200 cm−1 . The spectrum is assigned to the anti conformer. Vibrational assignments are indicated in red font for fundamental vibrations and black font for overtones and combination bands. The ‘?’ symbol denotes a depleted band that has no corresponding line in REMPI experiments; any coincidence is merely an artefact of the compacted scale.
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Page 26 of 33
Table 5: Excitation frequencies for the Anti conformer, relative to the origin transition (18200 cm−1 ), their assignments and comparison with theory, including the mean absolute deviation (MAD) for the fundamental assignments. All units are in wavenumbers (cm−1 ). Observed
Fundamental Assignments
0
000
168
3510
Combinations & Overtones
3510 3610
226
Theory
∆T −O
173
5
221
-5
281
3310
289
7
326
3410
339
13
368
2410
380
12
372
3410 3610
384
12
403
3520 3610
394
-9
442
3210
445
3
467
2310
466
-1
513
3210 3610
500
-13
522
2310 3610
525
3
532
-1
533
2210
579
2210 3610
591
12
599
2410 3510 3610
594
-5
655
2410 3310
649
-6
657
3420
652
-5
723
3210 3310
723
0
733
2710
735
2
740
2110
740
0
742
2420
736
-6
793
2710 3610
791
-2
860
3410 2210
859
-1
879
3220
884
5
888
2010
901
13
939
1910
943
4
934
-6
992
-11
1014
-3
MAD (fundamentals)
6.0
2320
940 1003 1017
1810 2710 3310
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The Journal of Physical Chemistry
quantum, it seems to readily build upon other a′ and a′′ transitions, including 3510 , 3410 , 3210 , 2310 , 2210 and 2710 . The band at +599 cm−1 also contains 3610 , combined with 2410 and 3510 . The ‘theory’ value for all combinations and overtones in table 5 is taken as the direct harmonic addition of the corresponding observed frequencies for the fundamental transitions, rather than values from the Gaussian calculations. The mean absolute deviation for all fundamental frequencies of the anti conformer is 6.0 cm−1 . This is very similar to the 5.7 cm−1 for all modes of the syn isomer. With all peaks accounted for, we believe that this spectrum can be successfully assigned as the anti conformer of the ortho complex. Finally, the Duschinsky matrices were used initially as a guide for assignment of the spectra. They provided a clear, visual way to inspect whether the point group of the molecule changed following electronic excitation. They guided the assignment process by preserving the Cs symmetry for the syn isomer, but relaxing the symmetry to C1 for the anti isomer. The spectra were successfully assigned using this strategy. In reverse, the success of the Duschinsky matrices and the subsequent spectroscopic assignments reinforces that the nuclear framework of the syn isomer is planar, or at least pseudo-planar with a barrier to planarity below the zero-point energy. The Duschinsky matrix approach might provide a general way to determine whether a molecule is functionally changing symmetry in an electronic transition, especially in circumstances where theory is ambiguous.
6
Conclusions
A REMPI scheme has been recorded for the hydrogen addition to the ortho position of phenol. Two rotamers were uncovered, where the hydroxyl group is situated syn and anti to the ortho CH2 . The spectra span some ∼1000 cm−1 and through the use of hole burning spectroscopy, was able to be separated into an isomeric dependence. The origin transition lies at 18200 cm−1 for the anti conformer, and 18218 cm−1 for the syn conformer. All peaks recorded within the REMPI scan were able to be assigned to one of the two rotamers. In their ground
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state, both conformers are of Cs symmetry. Upon excitation, the anti conformer undergoes a geometric change to C1 , whilst the syn conformer retains an almost planar Cs nature and the spectra were assigned accordingly. This change in geometry and symmetry is validated by an evaluation of the Duschinsky matrices for each isomer’s excitation. The MAD for the anti fundamental assignments was 6.0 cm−1 . For the syn rotamer, the a′ and a′′ assignments were made with MADs of 1.8 and 9.6 cm−1 respectively. Whilst the relatively cheap TDB3LYP/6-311+G(d,p) level of theory was largely successful in calculating the excited state frequencies, it was clearly more accurate for the in-plane vibrations than out-of-plane. The observation of both rotamers under our discharge conditions implies both will also be present in atmospheric and combustion environments. We expect the two rotamers to have a similar reactivity, in energetic environments; however it will be interesting to see whether their relative abundance and reactivity is changed under cold matrix-isolated conditions, where the relative orientation of reactants plays a larger role. We hope the current work will aid in detecting the cdhOH radicals in chemically relevant environments and further elucidate the mechanism of the benzene + OH reactions.
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References (1) Calvert, J.; Atkinson, R.; Becker, K.; Kamens, R.; Seinfeld, J.; Wallington, T.; Yarwood, G. The Mechanisms of Atmospheric Oxidation of the Aromatic Hydrocarbons; Oxford University Press, 2002. (2) Olivella, S.; Solé, A.; Bofill, J. M. Theoretical Mechanistic Study of the Oxidative Degradation of Benzene in the Troposphere: Reaction of Benzene−HO Radical Adduct with O2 . Journal of Chemical Theory and Computation 2009, 5, 1607–1623. (3) Tokmakov, I. V.; Lin, M. C. Kinetics and Mechanism of the OH + C6 H6 Reaction: A Detailed Analysis with First-Principles Calculations. The Journal of Physical Chemistry A 2002, 106, 11309–11326. (4) Martín-Reviejo, M.; Wirtz, K. Is Benzene a Precursor for Secondary Organic Aerosol? Environmental Science & Technology 2005, 39, 1045–1054. (5) Ng, N. L.; Kroll, J. H.; Chan, A. W. H.; Chhabra, P. S.; Flagan, R. C.; Seinfeld, J. H. Secondary Organic Aerosol Formation from m-Xylene, Toluene, and Benzene. Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics 2007, 7, 3909–3922. (6) Henze, D. K.; Seinfeld, J. H.; Ng, N. L.; Kroll, J. H.; Fu, T.-M.; Jacob, D. J.; Heald, C. L. Global Modeling of Secondary Organic Aerosol Formation from Aromatic Hydrocarbons: High- vs. Low-Yield Pathways. Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics 2008, 8, 2405–2420. (7) Hallquist, M.; Wenger, J. C.; Baltensperger, U.; Rudich, Y.; Simpson, D.; Claeys, M.; Dommen, J.; Donahue, N. M.; George, C.; Goldstein, A. H. et al. The Formation, Properties and Impact of Secondary Organic Aerosol: Current and Emerging Issues. Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics 2009, 9, 5155–5236.
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(8) Borrás, E.; Tortajada-Genaro, L. A. Secondary Organic Aerosol Formation from the Photo-Oxidation of Benzene. Atmospheric Environment 2012, 47, 154 – 163. (9) Lay, T. H.; Bozzelli, J. W.; Seinfeld, J. H. Atmospheric Photochemical Oxidation of Benzene: Benzene + OH and the Benzene−OH Adduct (Hydroxyl-2,4-cyclohexadienyl) + O2 . The Journal of Physical Chemistry 1996, 100, 6543–6554. (10) Ghigo, G.; Tonachini, G. Benzene Oxidation in the Troposphere. Theoretical Investigation on the Possible Competition of Three Postulated Reaction Channels. Journal of the American Chemical Society 1998, 120, 6753–6757. (11) Chen, C.-C.; Bozzelli, J. W.; Farrell, J. T. Thermochemical Properties, Pathway, and Kinetic Analysis on the Reactions of Benzene with OH: An Elementary Reaction Mechanism. The Journal of Physical Chemistry A 2004, 108, 4632–4652. (12) Wang, L.; Wu, R.; Xu, C. Atmospheric Oxidation Mechanism of Benzene. Fates of Alkoxy Radical Intermediates and Revised Mechanism. The Journal of Physical Chemistry A 2013, 117, 14163–14168. (13) Volkamer, R.; Klotz, B.; Barnes, I.; Imamura, T.; Wirtz, K.; Washida, N.; Becker, K. H.; Platt, U. OH-Initiated Oxidation of Benzene Part I. Phenol Formation under Atmospheric Conditions. Physical Chemistry Chemical Physics 2002, 4, 1598–1610. (14) Klotz, B.; Volkamer, R.; Hurley, M. D.; Sulbaek Andersen, M. P.; Nielsen, O. J.; Barnes, I.; Imamura, T.; Wirtz, K.; Becker, K.-H.; Platt, U. et al. OH-Initiated Oxidation of Benzene Part II.Influence of Elevated NO Concentrations. Physical Chemistry Chemical Physics 2002, 4, 4399–4411. (15) Berndt, T.; Boge, O. Formation of Phenol and Carbonyls from the Atmospheric Reaction of OH Radicals with Benzene. Physical Chemistry Chemical Physics 2006, 8, 1205–1214.
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(16) Hollman, D. S.; Simmonett, A. C.; Schaefer, H. F. The Benzene+OH Potential Energy Surface: Intermediates and Transition States. Physical Chemistry Chemical Physics 2011, 13, 2214–2221. (17) Glowacki, D. R.; Wang, L.; Pilling, M. J. Evidence of Formation of Bicyclic Species in the Early Stages of Atmospheric Benzene Oxidation. The Journal of Physical Chemistry A 2009, 113, 5385–5396. (18) Seta, T.; Nakajima, M.; Miyoshi, A. High-Temperature Reactions of OH Radicals with Benzene and Toluene. The Journal of Physical Chemistry A 2006, 110, 5081–5090. (19) Atkinson, R. Monograph No. 2. Journal of Physical and Chemical Reference Data 1994, 2. (20) Mardyukov, A.; Sanchez-Garcia, E.; Crespo-Otero, R.; Sander, W. Interaction and Reaction of the Phenyl Radical with Water: A Source of OH Radicals. Angewandte Chemie International Edition 2009, 48, 4804–4807. (21) Mardyukov, A.; Crespo-Otero, R.; Sanchez-Garcia, E.; Sander, W. Photochemistry and Reactivity of the Phenyl Radical–Water System: A Matrix Isolation and Computational Study. Chemistry – A European Journal 2010, 16, 8679–8689. (22) Krechkivska, O.; Wilcox, C. M.; Troy, T. P.; Nauta, K.; Chan, B.; Jacob, R.; Reid, S. A.; Radom, L.; Schmidt, T. W.; Kable, S. H. Hydrogen-Atom Attack on Phenol and Toluene is Ortho-Directed. Physical Chemistry Chemical Physics 2016, 18, 8625–8636. (23) Gardner, A. M.; Wright, T. G. Consistent Assignment of the Vibrations of Monosubstituted Benzenes. The Journal of Chemical Physics 2011, 135, 114305. (24) Andrejeva, A.; Tuttle, W. D.; Harris, J. P.; Wright, T. G. Assignment of the Vibrations of the S0 , S1 , and D0+ States of Perhydrogenated and Perdeuterated Isotopologues of Chlorobenzene. The Journal of Chemical Physics 2015, 143, 104312. 31
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(25) Troy, T. P.; Nakajima, M.; Chalyavi, N.; Nauta, K.; Kable, S. H.; Schmidt, T. W. Hydroxyl Addition to Aromatic Alkenes: Resonance-Stabilized Radical Intermediates. The Journal of Physical Chemistry A 2012, 116, 7906–7915. (26) Frisch, M. J.; Trucks, G. W.; Schlegel, H. B.; Scuseria, G. E.; Robb, M. A.; Cheeseman, J. R.; Scalmani, G.; Barone, V.; Petersson, G. A.; Nakatsuji, H. et al. Gaussian 16 Revision A.03. 2016; Gaussian Inc., 340 Quinnipiac Street, Building 40, Wallingford CT 06492. (27) Merrick, J. P.; Moran, D.; Radom, L. An Evaluation of Harmonic Vibrational Frequency Scale Factors. The Journal of Physical Chemistry A 2007, 111, 11683–11700. (28) Pugliesi, I.; Müller-Dethlefs, K. The Use of Multidimensional Franck−Condon Simulations to Assess Model Chemistries: A Case Study on Phenol. The Journal of Physical Chemistry A 2006, 110, 4657–4667, A free download of the software can be found at http://www.fclab2.net. (29) Reilly, N. J.; Nakajima, M.; Gibson, B. A.; Schmidt, T. W.; Kable, S. H. LaserInduced Fluorescence and Dispersed Fluorescence Spectroscopy of Jet-Cooled 1Phenylpropargyl Radical. The Journal of Chemical Physics 2009, 130, 144313. (30) Kemp, D. J.; Tuttle, W. D.; Jones, F. M. S.; Gardner, A. M.; Andrejeva, A.; Wakefield, J. C. A.; Wright, T. G. Consistent Assignment of the Vibrations of Symmetric and Asymmetric Meta-Disubstituted Benzenes. Journal of Molecular Spectroscopy 2018, 46–59. (31) Krechkivska, O.; Liu, Y.; Lee, K. L. K.; Nauta, K.; Kable, S. H.; Schmidt, T. W. Triple-Resonance Spectroscopy Reveals the Excitation Spectrum of Very Cold, IsomerSpecific Protonated Naphthalene. The Journal of Physical Chemistry Letters 2013, 4, 3728–3732.
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(32) Alata, I.; Dedonder, C.; Broquier, M.; Marceca, E.; Jouvet, C. Role of the ChargeTransfer State in the Electronic Absorption of Protonated Hydrocarbon Molecules. Journal of the American Chemical Society 2010, 132, 17483–17489.
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