Hydrogen Atom Transfer from Water or Alcohols Activated by Presolvated Electrons

J Phys Chem Lett. 2015 Mar 19;6(6):986-92. doi: 10.1021/acs.jpclett.5b00288. Epub 2015 Mar 5.

Abstract

High-energy irradiation of protic solvents can transiently introduce excess electrons that are implicated in a diverse range of reductive processes. Here we report the evolution of electron solvation in water and in alcohols following photodetachment from aqueous hydroxide or the corresponding alkoxides studied by two- and three-pulse femtosecond spectroscopy and ab initio molecular dynamic simulations. The experiments reveal an ultrafast recombination channel of the excess electrons. Through the calculations this channel emerges as an H-atom transfer process to the hydroxyl or alkoxy radical species from neighboring solvent molecules, which are activated as the presolvated electron occupies their antibonding orbitals. The initially low activation barrier in the early stages of electron solvation was found to increase (from 12 to 44 kJ/mol in water) as full solvation proceeded.

Keywords: CTTS; antibonding states; photodetachment; pump−repump−probe spectroscopy; quantum simulations; solvated electron.