Journal of Physical Chemistry A, Vol.110, No.9, 3165-3173, 2006
Formation and decomposition of chemically activated cyclopentoxy radicals from the c-C5H9+O reaction
The formation and the decomposition of chemically activated cyclopentoxy radicals from the C-C5H9 + O reaction have been studied in the gas phase at room temperature. Two different experimental arrangements have been used. Arrangement A consisted of a laser-flash photolysis set up combined with quantitative Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy and allowed the determination of the stable products at 4 mbar. The c-C5H9 radicals were produced via the reaction c-C5H10 + Cl with chlorine atoms from the photolysis of CFCl3; the O atoms were generated by photolysis of SO2. Arrangement B, a conventional discharge flow-reactor with molecular beam sampling, was used to determine the rate coefficient. Here, the hydrocarbon radicals (c-C5H9, C2H5, CH2OCH3) were produced via the reaction of atomic fluorine with c-C5H10, C2H6, and CH3OCH3, respectively, and detected by mass spectrometry after laser photoionization. For the c-C5H9 + 0 reaction, the relative contributions of intermediate formation (c-C5H9O*) and direct abstraction (C-C5H8 + OH) were found to be 68 +/- 5 and 32 +/-4%, respectively. The decomposition products of the chemically activated intermediate could be identified, and the following relative branching fractions were obtained: C-C5H8O + H (31 +/- 2%), CH2CH(CH2)(2)CHO + H (40 +/- 5%), 2 C2H4 + H + CO (17 +/- 5%), and C3H4O + C2H4 + H (12 +/- 5%). Additionally, the product formation of the C-C5H8 + 0 reaction was studied, and the following relative yields were obtained (mol %): C2H4, 24%; C3H4O, 18%; c-C5H8O, 30%; c-C5H8O, 23%; 4-pentenal, 5%. The rate coefficient of the c-C5H9 + O reaction was determined relative to the reactions C2H5 + 0 and CH3OCH2 + O leading to k = (1.73 +/- 0.05) x 10(14) cm(3) mol(-1) s(-1). The experimental branching fractions are analyzed in terms of statistical rate theory with molecular and transition-state data from quantum chemical calculations, and high-pressure limiting Arrhenius parameters for the unimolecular decomposition reactions of C5H9O species are derived.