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Reactions of Doubly Ionized Benzene with Nitrogen and Water: A Nitrogen-Mediated Entry into Superacid Chemistry
- Source :
- ChemPhysChem. 13:2688-2698
- Publication Year :
- 2012
- Publisher :
- Wiley, 2012.
-
Abstract
- Even in the highly diluted gas phase, rather than electron transfer the benzene dication C(6)H(6)(2+) undergoes association with dinitrogen to form a transient C(6)H(6)N(2)(2+) dication which is best described as a ring-protonated phenyl diazonium ion. Isotopic labeling studies, photoionization experiments using synchrotron radiation, and quantum chemical computations fully support the formation of protonated diazonium, which is in turn a prototype species of superacidic chemistry in solution. Additionally, reactions of C(6)H(6)(2+) with background water involve the transient formation of diprotonated phenol and, among other things, afford a long-lived C(6)H(6)OH(2)(2+) dication, which is attributed to the hydration product of Hogeveen's elusive pyramidal structure of C(6)H(6)(2+), as the global minimum of doubly ionized benzene. Nitrogen is essential for the formation of the C(6)H(6)OH(2)(2+) dication in that it mediates the formation of the water adduct, while the bimolecular encounter of the C(6)H(6)(2+) dication with water only leads to (dissociative) electron transfer.
Details
- ISSN :
- 14394235
- Volume :
- 13
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- ChemPhysChem
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....bcc1b0bcca1b301b2c9f6a5328ebb75e