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Article
Direct Spectroscopic Observation of Closed-Shell Singlet, Open-Shell Singlet, and Triplet p-Biphenylyloxenium Ion
Journal of the American Chemical Society
  • Ming-De Li, University of Hong Kong
  • Patrick J. Hanway, Iowa State University
  • Toshia Albright, Iowa State University
  • Arthur Winter, Iowa State University
  • David Lee Phillips, University of Hong Kong
Document Type
Article
Publication Version
Published Version
Publication Date
1-1-2014
DOI
10.1021/ja505447q
Abstract

The photophysics and photochemistry of p-biphenylyl hydroxylamine hydrochloride was studied using laser flash photolysis ranging from the femtosecond to the microsecond time scale. The singlet excited state of this photoprecursor is formed within 350 fs and partitions into three different transients that are assigned to the p-biphenyloxy radical, the open-shell singlet p-biphenylyloxenium ion, and the triplet p-biphenylyloxenium ion, having lifetimes of 40 μs, 45 ps, and 1.6 ns, respectively, in CH3CN. The open-shell singlet p-biphenylyloxenium ion predominantly undergoes internal conversion to produce the closed-shell singlet p-biphenylyloxenium ion, which has a lifetime of 5–20 ns. The longer-lived radical is unambiguously assigned by nanosecond time-resolved resonance Raman (ns-TR3) spectroscopy, and the assignment of the short-lived singlet and triplet oxenium ion transient absorptions are supported by matching time-dependent density functional theory (TD-DFT) predictions of the absorptions of these species, as well as by product studies that implicate the intermediacy of charged electrophilic intermediates. Product studies from photolysis give p-biphenylol as the major product and a chloride adduct as the major product when NaCl is added as a trap. Thermolysis studies give p-biphenylol as a major product, as well as water, ammonium, and chloro adducts. These studies provide a rare direct look at a discrete oxenium ion intermediate and the first detection of open-shell singlet and triplet configurations of an oxenium ion, as well as providing an intriguing example of the importance of excited state dynamics in governing the electronic state population of reactive intermediates.

Comments

Reprinted (adapted) with permission from J. Am. Chem. Soc., 2014, 136 (35), pp 12364–12370. Copyright 2014 American Chemical Society.

Copyright Owner
American Chemical Society
Language
en
File Format
application/pdf
Citation Information
Ming-De Li, Patrick J. Hanway, Toshia Albright, Arthur Winter, et al.. "Direct Spectroscopic Observation of Closed-Shell Singlet, Open-Shell Singlet, and Triplet p-Biphenylyloxenium Ion" Journal of the American Chemical Society Vol. 136 Iss. 35 (2014) p. 12364 - 12370
Available at: http://works.bepress.com/arthur_winter/7/