Abstract
Alkynyl radicals and cations are crucial reactive intermediates in chemistry, but often evade direct detection. Herein, we report the direct observation of the phenylethynyl radical (C6H5CC˙) and its cation (C6H5CC+), which are two of the most reactive intermediates in organic chemistry. The radical is generated via pyrolysis of (bromoethynyl)benzene at temperatures above 1500 K and is characterized by photoion mass-selected threshold photoelectron spectroscopy (ms-TPES). Photoionization of the phenylethynyl radical yields the phenylethynyl cation, which has never been synthesized due to its extreme electrophilicity. Vibrationally-resolved ms-TPES assisted by ab initio calculations unveiled the complex electronic structure of the phenylethynyl cation, which appears at an adiabatic ionization energy (AIE) of 8.90 ± 0.05 eV and exhibits an uncommon triplet (3B1) ground state, while the closed-shell singlet (1A1) state lies just 2.8 kcal mol-1 (0.12 eV) higher in energy. The reactive phenylethynyl radical abstracts hydrogen to form ethynylbenzene (C6H5CCH) but also isomerizes via H-shift to the o-, m-, and p-ethynylphenyl isomers (C6H4CCH). These radicals are very reactive and undergo ring-opening followed by H-loss to form a mixture of C8H4 triynes, along with low yields of cyclic 3- and 4-ethynylbenzynes (C6H3CCH). At higher temperatures, dehydrogenation from the unbranched C8H4 triynes forms the linear tetraacetylene (C8H2), an astrochemically relevant polyyne.
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