Experimental Observation of Hydrocarbon Growth by Resonance-Stabilized Radical-Radical Chain Reaction

Angew Chem Int Ed Engl. 2021 Dec 20;60(52):27230-27235. doi: 10.1002/anie.202110929. Epub 2021 Nov 10.

Abstract

Rapid molecular-weight growth of hydrocarbons occurs in flames, in industrial synthesis, and potentially in cold astrochemical environments. A variety of high- and low-temperature chemical mechanisms have been proposed and confirmed, but more facile pathways may be needed to explain observations. We provide laboratory confirmation in a controlled pyrolysis environment of a recently proposed mechanism, radical-radical chain reactions of resonance-stabilized species. The recombination reaction of phenyl (c-C6 H5 ) and benzyl (c-C6 H5 CH2 ) radicals produces both diphenylmethane and diphenylmethyl radicals, the concentration of the latter increasing with rising temperature. A second phenyl addition to the product radical forms both triphenylmethane and triphenylmethyl radicals, confirming the propagation of radical-radical chain reactions under the experimental conditions of high temperature (1100-1600 K) and low pressure (ca. 3 kPa). Similar chain reactions may contribute to particle growth in flames, the interstellar medium, and industrial reactors.

Keywords: flash pyrolysis; hydrocarbon clustering; polycycles; polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons; radical reactions.

Grants and funding