Abstract

The addition of 10 −5 — 2 Torr of NO, a radical scavenger, is found to significantly quench the rate of photonucleation of nonane by NO 2 or CH 3I in a diffusion cloud chamber. This confirms a recently proposed radical mechanism for the photoinduced nucleation of these systems. The photonucleation rate of nonane induced by o-tolualdehyde (a system whose mechanism is not known) is similarly quenched by the addition of small amounts of NO, suggesting a radical mechanism. A mechanism for this system, based upon the formation of nonane radicals (resulting from hydrogen abstraction from nonane by the carbonyl molecules in the n,π* singlet or triplet state) followed by further reaction of the radicals to form low vapor pressure species, is discussed. Acetone, a system known to dissociate into radicals, is found to photoinduce nucleation of nonane when excited to the lowest singlet or triplet excited states. This adds further support to the proposed radical mechanism and suggests that acetone dissociates in its lowest singlet as well as its lowest triplet state. A theoretical model is outlined in which the production of large involatile alkanes (dimers and higher polymers) are formed from an initially produced nonane radical. These results are combined with binary nucleation theory in order to calculate the effect of these species on the rate of nucleation. These calculations indicate that low concentrations of these involatile species can indeed induce nucleation. The ability of small, photochemically produced polymers to induce nucleation is also examined and the time dependent space distribution of polymers (e.g., vinyl polymers) generated by chain transfer from a single free radical is derived. The small polymers formed in this process are analogous to the species formed in the photoinduced nucleation of alkane vapors.

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