This paper addresses the basic question of the impact of a chemically inert environment on the radiation-induced transformations of isolated organic molecules in icy media at cryogenic temperatures with possible implications for astrochemical issues. The radicals produced by X-ray irradiation of isolated ethanol molecules (CHOH and CHCDOH) in solid argon and xenon matrices at 7 K were characterized by electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) spectroscopy. It was shown that methyl (CH˙) and formyl (HCO˙) radicals resulting from the C-C bond cleavage were mainly produced in the case of solid argon, which was attributed to the significant role of "hot" ionic fragmentation and inefficient energy dissipation to medium. In contrast, irradiation in xenon results in the predominant formation of α-hydroxyethyl radicals (CH˙CHOH or CH˙CDOH(D) in the cases of CHOH and CHCDOH, respectively). Remarkably, the experiments with selectively deuterated ethanol provide strong indirect evidence for the primary formation of ethoxy (CHCDO˙) radicals due to O-H bond cleavage, which convert to the α-hydroxyethyl radicals due to isomerization occurring at 7 K. The α-hydroxyethyl radicals adopt a specific rigid conformation with a non-rotating methyl group at low temperatures, which is an unusual effect for neutral CH˙CHX species, and exhibit free rotation in solid xenon only at 65 K.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/d2cp05356j | DOI Listing |
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