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Photochemistry Lecture 8 Photodissociation
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ABCD + h AB + CD Importance Atmospheric and astrophysical environment Primary step in photochemical processes – free radical production Fundamental studies of dynamics of chemical reactions
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Atmospheric Chemistry – the ozone hole In the stratosphere, ozone protects the earth from damaging UV radiation via the Chapman cycle O 2 + h → O + O( < 242 nm) O 3 + h → O 2 + O( < 1180 nm) O + O 2 + M O 3 + M O + O 3 O 2 + O 2 Solar energy converted into thermal energy…heating…temperature inversion.
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Catalytic destruction of ozone e.g., CF 2 Cl 2 + h CF 2 Cl + Cl Cl + O 3 ClO + O 2 ClO + O Cl + O 2 Formation of reservoir species e.g., Cl + CH 4 CH 3 + HCl ClO + NO 2 + M ClONO 2 + M
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Antarctic ozone hole ClONO 2 + HCl Cl 2 + HNO 3 Hetergeneous catalysis on polar stratospheric clouds Cl 2 + h Cl + Cl Regeneration of ozone destruction mechanism
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Smog formation Production of OH radical in troposphere via sequence… NO 2 + h NO + O O( 1 D) + H 2 O OH + OH Oxidation of hydrocarbons (with regeneration of OH and NO 2 OH + RCH 3 RCH 2 + H 2 O ……+ O 2 RCH 2 O 2 ……..
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Direct dissociation – excitation into continuum of excited electronic state Absorption spectrum becomes continuous at sufficiently short wavelength as h crosses a dissociation threshold Absorption spectrum
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The excited state may correlate to different dissociation limit to ground state e.g., for BrCl, the first excited state correlates with Br + Cl* Cl* 2 P 1/2 state Cl 2 P 3/2 state (energy difference =E, spin-orbit splitting) Br + Cl Br + Cl* EE
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Wavefunctions in the continuum Vertical excitation favoured by Franck- Condon factors
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Simple photodissociation within a single electronic state is essentially forbidden This could be considered as the extreme limit of vibrational overtone excitation; v very large
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Predissociation Molecule excited to bound state – vibrates for perhaps a few periods then undergoes curve crossing and dissociates on repulsive PE curve Franck Condon factor for excitation determined by overlap with bound state wavefn as before.
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Lifetime broadening of predissociating levels Sometimes known as the time-energy uncertainty relationship In this context: t lifetime of excited state E “homogeneous” linewidth of transition 5 ps 1 cm -1 linewidth
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Upper state predissociation evident in linewidths of P and R branch transitions of Se 2 P branch R branch
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Photodissociation of polyatomic molecules Potentially more than one product channel for sufficiently high photolysis energy e.g., formaldehyde CH 2 =O + h H + HCO H 2 + CO Latter requires rearrangement via 3-membered ring transition state Should generally consider dissociation in polyatomics as occurring via a form of predissociation…..energy transfer from initially excited state to a dissociative state.
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Energy requirements State in which excited molecule resides must be higher than dissociation energy For the halonaphthalenes X-Np 1-I-Np can dissociate from T 1 1-Br-Np only dissociates from S 1 1-Cl-Np does not dissociate D0D0
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Localization of excitation The weakest bond is most likely to break - but consider -bromochlorobenzoyl ester The excitation in the S 1 state is localized in the benzene ring, and therefore cannot effectively be transferred into the weakest C-Br bond. Dissociation depends on suitable pathway on excited state PE surface
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Stabilization of radical products Propensity to undergo dissociation in a series of compounds may depend on stabilization of radical e.g., phenyl vs benzyl radical formation
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Cage effect in Solution h Escape from cage geminate recombination
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Classic example – photodissociation of I 2 in solution In gas phase, quantum yield for photodissociation is unity for < 499 nm In CCl 4, = 0.66 at 435.8nm = 0.83 at 404.7nm As excess kinetic energy of I fragments increases, becomes easier to break out of the solvent case I2I2 I + I
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Picosecond flash photolysis on I 2 in CCl 4 Photodissociate I 2 using ps light pulse, detect I atoms with second delayed ps light pulse. Rapid decay due to geminate recomb. Longer timescale recombination outside cage
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Conservation of energy in gas-phase photodissociation (cf photoelectron spectroscopy ) ABCD AB + CD E(ABCD) + h = D 0 + E int (AB) + E int (CD) + KE(AB) + KE(CD) E int is the vibration-rotation (electronic) energy of fragments – in solution this would be rapidly degraded by collisional vibrational relaxation KE(AB) related to KE(CD) by momentum conservation Measure kinetic energy and internal energy of one product AB or CD – can figure out other unknowns (D 0 and E int ) Use multiphoton ionization and ion imaging to make these measurements
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Measuring the velocities of the products of photo- dissociation by ionization and imaging Cl 2 photolysis image – detect Cl atoms
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Imaging the products of photo- dissociation Cl 2 photolysis image Perpendicular distance travelled is determined by fragment (Cl) KE Cl 2 + h = Cl + Cl h-D 0 = 2KE(Cl) Anisotropic image shows propensity for ejection in a specific direction relative to laser polarization.
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Images from the photodissociation of ClO 2 – different predissociating levels of excited state populated. O atom detection - Different rings correspond to vibrational states (v‘) of ClO product ClO 2 ClO 2 *(v) ClO(v') + O( 3 P 2 )
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Femtosecond studies of simple dissociation processes. Pulses of light as short as a few fs (10 -15 s) routinely created with certain types of laser Frequency bandwidth of pulse broadens as pulse duration shortens 10 fs pulse has a bandwidth of 500 cm -1 cf typical vibrational frequencies Several vibrational levels excited simultaneously
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Wavepacket formation Excite molecule with femtosecond laser pulse- frequency bandwidth overlaps transitions to several vibrational states Produce a vibrational wavefunction which is a superposition of many vibrational states Can form a localised wavepacket through interference between these waves Not an eigenstate thus coefficients evolve with time; this becomes equivalent to the wavepacket moving like a classical particle (but also spreading in a non classical fashion)
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Superposition of many waves of different frequency
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Initially created wavepacket has same shape has ground state wavefunction Wavepacket evolves with time like a classical particle predissociation
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Onset of dissociation Vibrating bound molecules
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Controlling the outcome of dissociative processes in polyatomic molecules Can we use short pulses (femtosecond) to create a wavepacket that evolves in time such as to cause a particular dissociation process? We can create variable initial wavepackets by choosing the shape of the light wave pulse.
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Superimposing coherent waves of many different frequencies allows construction of arbitrary light wave forms
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University of Wurzburg
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Computer optimised laser pulse
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Shaped laser pulses for controlling photochemical processes
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Adaptive control of CpFe(CO) 2 X fragmentation (X=Cl, Br,I) CpFe(CO) 2 X CpFe(CO)X + CO CpFeX + 2CO FeX + 2CO +Cp Cp = cyclopentadienyl Optimise laser pulse shape to maximise yield of e.g., CpFe(CO)X; factor of 2 improvement in CpFe(CO)X to FeX ratio
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