Back to Search Start Over

Cooling dynamics of energized naphthalene and azulene radical cations

Authors :
Jason W. L. Lee
Mark H. Stockett
Eleanor K. Ashworth
José E. Navarro Navarrete
Eva Gougoula
Diksha Garg
MingChao Ji
Boxing Zhu
Suvasthika Indrajith
Henning Zettergren
Henning T. Schmidt
James N. Bull
Source :
The journal of chemical physics 158, 174305 (2023). doi:10.1063/5.0147456
Publication Year :
2023
Publisher :
AIP Publishing, 2023.

Abstract

The journal of chemical physics 158, 174305 (2023). doi:10.1063/5.0147456<br />Naphthalene and azulene are isomeric polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs) and are topical in the context of astrochemistry due to the recent discovery of substituted naphthalenes in the Taurus Molecular Cloud-1 (TMC-1). Here, the thermal- and photo-induced isomerization, dissociation, and radiative cooling dynamics of energized (vibrationally hot) naphthalene (Np$^+$) and azulene (Az$^+$) radical cations, occurring over the microsecond to seconds timescale, are investigated using a cryogenic electrostatic ion storage ring, affording “molecular cloud in a box” conditions. Measurement of the cooling dynamics and kinetic energy release distributions for neutrals formed through dissociation, until several seconds after hot ion formation, are consistent with the establishment of a rapid (sub-microsecond) Np$^+ ⇌$ Az$^+$ quasi-equilibrium. Consequently, dissociation by C$_2$H$_2$-elimination proceeds predominantly through common Az$^+$ decomposition pathways. Simulation of the isomerization, dissociation, recurrent fluorescence, and infrared cooling dynamics using a coupled master equation combined with high-level potential energy surface calculations [CCSD(T)/cc-pVTZ], reproduce the trends in the measurements. The data show that radiative cooling via recurrent fluorescence, predominately through the Np$^+$ D$_0$ ← D$_2$ transition, efficiently quenches dissociation for vibrational energies up to ≈1 eV above dissociation thresholds. Our measurements support the suggestion that small cations, such as naphthalene, may be more abundant in space than previously thought. The strategy presented in this work could be extended to fingerprint the cooling dynamics of other PAH ions for which isomerization is predicted to precede dissociation.<br />Published by American Institute of Physics, Melville, NY

Details

ISSN :
10897690 and 00219606
Volume :
158
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
The Journal of Chemical Physics
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....d07254b4112b664bfb21800da0bf3540