In this work, we studied the wavelength (520 or 350 nm) dependence of the photochemical decomposition of 1-phenyl-1-diazopropane () and 1-phenyl-1-propyl diazirine () by means of high-level quantum chemical calculations (CASSCF and MS-CASPT2) to obtain qualitative and quantitative results. It is found that the photochemistry of is governed by nonradiative deactivation processes that can involve one or two S/S conical intersections ( and ) depending on the wavelength of the radiation; is only accessible at the shortest wavelength. It is demonstrated that the main intermediate of the photochemistry of the titled compounds is 1-ethyl-1-phenyl carbene (). Upon irradiation of with the 520 nm light, the carbene is always generated in its ground state as closed-shell singlet carbene. In contrast, the 350 nm radiation can directly decompose into S carbene (open shell) and N when the conical intersection is avoided. Once the carbene is formed in the S state, it can experience excited state intramolecular proton transfer along a seam of crossing (ESIPT-SC) of the S and S states to yield the alkene derivative; that is, the proton transfer reaction takes places on a degenerate potential energy surface where the two electronic states have equal energy. In addition, it is found that absorbs at 350 nm (double excitations); therefore, there is another possible route that can induce as well a slightly different photochemistry in changing the wavelength of the radiation because the shortest wavelength (when it is intense enough) decreases the amount of available or generates a highly vibrationally excited state of the carbene; that is, after 350 nm excitation, the carbene intermediate can deactivate via radiation emission or can decay through a cascade of conical intersections to its first excited state (S), where ESIPT-SC is operative again.
Download full-text PDF |
Source |
---|---|
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9677432 | PMC |
http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acs.jpca.2c04816 | DOI Listing |
Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!