학술논문

Solvent dependent structural perturbations of chemical reaction intermediates visualized by time-resolved x-ray diffraction.
Document Type
Article
Source
Journal of Chemical Physics. 4/21/2009, Vol. 130 Issue 15, p154502. 9p. 1 Diagram, 2 Charts, 6 Graphs.
Subject
*X-ray scattering
*CYCLOHEXANE
*CHEMICAL reactions
*X-ray diffraction
*METHANOL
*THERMODYNAMICS
*QUANTUM theory
*PHYSICAL & theoretical chemistry
Language
ISSN
0021-9606
Abstract
Ultrafast time-resolved wide angle x-ray scattering from chemical reactions in solution has recently emerged as a powerful technique for determining the structural dynamics of transient photochemical species. Here we examine the structural evolution of photoexcited CH2I2 in the nonpolar solvent cyclohexane and draw comparisons with a similar study in the polar solvent methanol. As with earlier spectroscopic studies, our data confirm a common initial reaction pathway in both solvents. After photoexcitation, CH2I2 dissociates to form CH2I·+I·. Iodine radicals remaining within the solvent cage recombine with a nascent CH2I· radical to form the transient isomer CH2I-I, whereas those which escape the solvent cage ultimately combine to form I2 in cyclohexane. Moreover, the transient isomer has a lifetime approximately 30 times longer in the nonpolar solvent. Of greater chemical significance is the property of time-resolved wide angle x-ray diffraction to accurately determine the structure of the of CH2I-I reaction intermediate. Thus we observe that the transient iodine-iodine bond is 0.07 ű0.04 Å shorter in cyclohexane than in methanol. A longer iodine-iodine bond length for the intermediate arises in methanol due to favorable H-bond interaction with the polar solvent. These findings establish that time-resolved x-ray diffraction has sufficient sensitivity to enable solvent dependent structural perturbations of transient chemical species to be accurately resolved. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]