Roy Tarun Kumar, Qian Yujie, Sojdak Christopher A, Kozlowski Marisa C, Klippenstein Stephen J, Lester Marsha I
Department of Chemistry, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania 19103-6323, USA.
Chemical Sciences and Engineering Division, Argonne National Laboratory, Lemont, Illinois 60439, USA.
J Chem Phys. 2024 Jul 21;161(3). doi: 10.1063/5.0219431.
Infrared (IR) action spectroscopy is utilized to characterize carbon-centered hydroperoxy-cyclohexyl radicals (·QOOH) transiently formed in cyclohexane oxidation. The oxidation pathway leads to three nearly degenerate ·QOOH isomers, β-, γ-, and δ-QOOH, which are generated in the laboratory by H-atom abstraction from the corresponding ring sites of the cyclohexyl hydroperoxide (CHHP) precursor. The IR spectral features of jet-cooled and stabilized ·QOOH radicals are observed from 3590 to 7010 cm-1 (∼10-20 kcal mol-1) at energies in the vicinity of the transition state (TS) barrier leading to OH radicals that are detected by ultraviolet laser-induced fluorescence. The experimental approach affords selective detection of β-QOOH, arising from its significantly lower TS barrier to OH products compared to γ and δ isomers, which results in rapid unimolecular decay and near unity branching to OH products. The observed IR spectrum of β-QOOH includes fundamental and overtone OH stretch transitions, overtone CH stretch transitions, and combination bands involving OH or CH stretch with lower frequency modes. The assignment of β-QOOH spectral features is guided by anharmonic frequencies and intensities computed using second-order vibrational perturbation theory. The overtone OH stretch (2νOH) of β-QOOH is shifted only a few wavenumbers from that observed for the CHHP precursor, yet they are readily distinguished by their prompt vs slow dissociation rates to OH products.