Isoprene is the most abundant nonmethane volatile organic compound emitted into the troposphere by terrestrial vegetation. Reaction with ozone represents an important isoprene removal process from the troposphere and is a well-known source of Criegee intermediates (CIs), which are reactive carbonyl oxides. Three CIs, formaldehyde oxide (CH OO), methyl vinyl ketone oxide (MVK-oxide) and methacrolein oxide (MACR-oxide) are formed during isoprene ozonolysis. All three CIs contain strongly absorbing ππ* states, electronic excitation, which leads to dissociation to form aldehyde/ketone + oxygen products. Here, we compare the excited state chemistry of CH OO, MVK-oxide and MACR-oxide in order to ascertain how increasing molecular complexity affects their photodynamics. In CH OO, vertical excitation to the S state leads to prompt O-O bond fission with a unity quantum yield. Branching into both the O ( D) + H CO (S ) and O ( P) + H CO (T ) product channels is predicted, with 80% of trajectories dissociating to form the former product pair. Analogous vertical excitation of the lowest energy conformers of MVK-oxide and MACR-oxide also undergoes O-O bond fission to form O + MVK/MACR products-albeit with a nonunity quantum yield. In the latter case, ca. 10% and 25% of trajectories remain as the parent MVK-oxide and MACR-oxide molecules, respectively. Additionally, at most only 5% of the dissociating trajectories form O ( P) + MVK/MACR (T ) products, with a greater fraction forming O ( D) + MVK/MACR (S ) products (cf. CH OO). This latter observation coupled with the greater fraction of undissociated trajectories aligns with the bathochromic shift in the electronic absorption of the MACR-oxide and MVK-oxide (cf. CH OO). We discuss the implications of the results in a broader context, including those that are relevant to the atmosphere.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/php.13736 | DOI Listing |
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