JOURNAL ARTICLE

Nanosecond-Pulse Radiolysis of Aniline

R. F. CooperJ. K. Thomas

Year: 1968 Journal:   The Journal of Chemical Physics Vol: 48 (11)Pages: 5103-5109   Publisher: American Institute of Physics

Abstract

The nanosecond-pulse radiolysis of pure aniline reveals two transient species absorbing at 3850 Å and 10 500 Å or higher. Each transient shows a rapid initial first-order decay (t1/2 = 62.5 ± 1.5 nsec) and a long-lived (tens of microseconds) decay. In the presence of electron scavengers, the long-wavelength transient is removed, and yields of the negative ions of biphenyl and pyrene are observed with plateau yields of G = 0.95 ± 0.05. At high concentrations of biphenyl or pyrene, the decay characteristics of the negative ions are identical with those of the species in pure aniline at 3850 Å. Scavenging studies using both positive and negative ion scavengers show that the two transients present in pure aniline are the solvent positive ion (3850 Å) and the solvated electron (10 500 Å) in aniline. The extinction coefficients of φNH2+ and eaniline− determined from ionic scavenging results are 12 050 and 3550 cm2/mole, respectively. The formation of excited states of naphthalene, anthracene, and 1, 2-benzanthracene are observed, and the results clearly show that, where solvent–solute charge-transfer reactions are possible, they lead to the production of ∼20% of the total triplet yields.

Keywords:
Radiolysis Chemistry Aniline Nanosecond Microsecond Ion Anthracene Photochemistry Pyrene Flash photolysis Excited state Solvent Biphenyl Analytical Chemistry (journal) Radical Atomic physics Reaction rate constant Kinetics Organic chemistry

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15
Cited By
2.63
FWCI (Field Weighted Citation Impact)
14
Refs
0.87
Citation Normalized Percentile
Is in top 1%
Is in top 10%

Citation History

Topics

Photochemistry and Electron Transfer Studies
Physical Sciences →  Chemistry →  Physical and Theoretical Chemistry
Spectroscopy and Quantum Chemical Studies
Physical Sciences →  Physics and Astronomy →  Atomic and Molecular Physics, and Optics
Mass Spectrometry Techniques and Applications
Physical Sciences →  Chemistry →  Spectroscopy

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