Abstract
The potential energy surfaces of dissociation and elimination reactions for CH(3)COCl in the ground (S0) and first excited singlet (S1) states have been mapped with the different ab inito calculations. Mechanistic photodissociation of CH(3)COCl has been characterized through the intrinsic reaction coordinate and ab initio molecular dynamics calculations. The alpha-C-C bond cleavage along the S1 pathway leads to the fragments of COCl((2)A' ') and CH(3) ((2)A') in an excited electronic state and a high barrier exists on the pathway. This channel is inaccessible in energy upon photoexcitation of the CH(3)COCl molecules at 236 nm. The S1 alpha-C-Cl bond cleavage yields the Cl((2)P) and CH(3)CO(X(2)A') fragments in the ground state and there is very small or no barrier on the pathway. The S1 alpha-C-Cl bond cleavage proceeds in a time scale of picosecond in the gas phase, followed by CH(3)CO decomposition to CH(3) and CO. The barrier to the C-Cl bond cleavage on the S1 surface is significantly increased by effects of the argon matrix. The S1 alpha-C-Cl bond cleavage in the argon matrix becomes inaccessible in energy upon photoexcitation of CH(3)COCl at 266 nm. In this case, the excited CH(3)COCl(S1) molecules cannot undergo the C-Cl bond cleavage in a short period. The internal conversion from S1 to S0 becomes the dominant process for the CH(3)COCl(S1) molecules in the condensed phase. As a result, the direct HCl elimination in the ground state becomes the exclusive channel upon 266 nm photodissociation of CH(3)COCl in the argon matrix at 11 K.
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