Abstract

Abstract Gas-phase coronene cations ( ) can be sequentially hydrogenated with up to 24 additional H atoms, inducing a gradual transition from a planar, aromatic molecule toward a corrugated, aliphatic species. The mass spectra of hydrogenated coronene cations show that molecules with odd numbers of additional hydrogen atoms (n H) are dominant, with particularly high relative intensity for “magic numbers” n H = 5, 11, and 17, for which hydrogen atoms have the highest binding energies. Reaction barriers and binding energies strongly affect the hydrogenation sequence and its site specificity. In this contribution, we monitor this sequence experimentally by the evolution of infrared multiple-photon dissociation (IRMPD) spectra of gaseous with n H = 3–11, obtained using an infrared free electron laser coupled to a Fourier transform ion cyclotron mass spectrometer. For weakly hydrogenated systems (n H = 3, 5) multiple-photon absorption mainly leads to loss of H atoms (and/or H2). With increasing n H, C2H2 loss becomes more relevant. For n H = 9, 11, the carbon skeleton is substantially weakened and fragmentation is distributed over a large number of channels. A comparison of our IRMPD spectra with density functional theory calculations clearly shows that only one or two hydrogenation isomers contribute to each n H. This confirms the concept of hydrogenation occurring along very specific sequences. Moreover, the atomic sites participating in the first 11 steps of this hydrogenation sequence are clearly identified.

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