Abstract

Ab initio G3(MP2,CC)/B3LYP/6–31G** calculations of the potential energy surface for the reaction of 3-acenaphthyl radical with acetylene were combined with Rice-Ramsperger-Kassel-Marcus Master Equation calculations of the temperature- and pressure-dependent reaction rate constants and product branching ratios with the goal to examine the transformation of an edge five-membered ring into a six-membered one. The reaction mechanism has been shown to contain two stages: (1) the formation of 3-ethynylacenaphthylene + H in the 3-acenaphthyl + C2H2 reaction via acetylene addition to the radical site and an H loss, (2) the formation of the 1-phenanthrenyl radical in the 3-ethynylacenaphthylene + H reaction via H addition to the five-membered ring followed by the ring flip. The results of kinetic modeling show this pathway being faster than the pathway proposed earlier featuring the CCH chemisorption on the six-membered ring without involvement of the five-membered ring. A kinetic test demonstrated the dominance of the former pathway for the formation of pyrene from naphthalene. It is expected that the new mechanism plays a major role in the transformation of five-membered rings on edges of PAH structures.

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