Abstract

Porous silica surfaces are shown to slowly catalyze the oxidation of adsorbed polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAH) to the corresponding radical cation via Lewis acid sites present on the surface. When a good electron acceptor such as methyl viologen dication (MV ++) is co-adsorbed on silica surface, a red-shifted structureless absorption band characteristic of a ground-state charge transfer (CT) complex formed between the PAH and MV ++ is observed. Oxygen efficiently competes with MV ++ for the trapped electrons on the active sites of silica surface causing a significant decrease in the concentration of ground-state CT complex. The rate of this electron transfer process is enhanced dramatically at the solid/liquid interface when solution of PAH in a non-polar solvent is added to dry silica containing adsorbed MV ++. Room temperature electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) spectra of PAHs adsorbed on silica show a broad unresolved signal ( g=2.0031–2.0045) due to PAH ⋅+ radical cation which disappears in the presence of air but can be restored upon evacuation of the sample. The EPR measurements of mixed samples containing PAH and MV ++ co-adsorbed on silica show a composite signal with hyperfine structure that may be due to presence of two paramagnetic species corresponding to MV ⋅+ and possibly PAH radical cation.

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