Abstract

The unimolecular decomposition of C(6)H(5)OH on its singlet-state potential energy surface has been studied at the G2M//B3LYP/6-311G(d,p) level of theory. The result shows that the most favorable reaction channel involves the isomerization and decomposition of phenol via 2,4-cyclohexadienone and other low-lying isomers prior to the fragmentation process, producing cyclo-C(5)H(6) + CO as major products, supporting the earlier assumption of the important role of the 2,4-cyclohexadienone intermediate. The rate constant predicted by the microcanonical RRKM theory in the temperature range 800-2000 K at 1 Torr--100 atm of Ar pressure for CO production agrees very well with available experimental data in the temperature range studied. The rate constants for the production of CO and the H atom by O-H dissociation at atmospheric Ar pressure can be represented by k(CO) = 8.62 x 10(15) T(-0.61) exp(-37,300/T) s(-1) and k(H) = 1.01 x 10(71) T(-15.92) exp(-62,800/T) s(-1). The latter process is strongly P-dependent above 1000 K; its high- and low-pressure limits are given.

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