화학공학소재연구정보센터
Journal of Physical Chemistry A, Vol.117, No.47, 12429-12437, 2013
Reactive Pathways in the Chlorobenzene-Ammonia Dimer Cation Radical: New Insights from Experiment and Theory
Building upon our recent studies of noncovalent interactions in chlorobenzene and bromobenzene clusters, in this work we focus on interactions of chlorobenzene (PhCl) with a prototypical N atom donor, ammonia (NH3). Thus, we have obtained electronic spectra of PhCl center dot center dot center dot(NH3)(n) (n = 1-3) complexes in the region of the PhCl monomer S-0 -S-1 (pi pi*) transition using resonant 2-photon ionization (R2PI) methods combined with time-of-flight mass analysis. Consistent with previous studies, we find that upon ionization the PhCl center dot center dot center dot NH3 dimer cation radical reacts primarily via Cl atom loss. A second channel, HCl loss, is identified for the first time in R2PI studies of the 1:1 complex, and a third channel, H atom loss, is identified for the first time. While prior studies have assumed the dominance of a pi-type complex, we find that the reactive complex corresponds instead to an in-plane sigma-type complex. This is supported by electronic structure calculations using density functional theory and post-Hartree-Fock methods and Franck-Condon analysis. The reactive pathways in this system were extensively characterized computationally, and consistent with results from previous calculations, we find two nearly isoenergetic arenium ions (Wheland intermediates; denoted WH1, WH2), which lie energetically below the initially formed dimer cation radical complex. At the energy of our experiment, intermediate WH1, produced from ipso-addition, is not stable with respect to Cl or HCl loss, and the relative branching between these channels observed in our experiment is well reproduced by microcanonical transition state theory calculations based upon the calculated parameters. Intermediate WH2, where NH3 adds ortho to the halogen, decomposes over a large barrier via H atom loss to form protonated o-chloroaniline. This channel is not open at the (2-photon) energy of our experiments, and it is suggested that photodissociation of a long-lived (i.e., several ns) WH2 intermediate leads to the observed products.