Time-resolved study of roaming neutral H<sub>2</sub> in acetonitrile
ORAL
Abstract
Roaming reactions have garnered significant interest in recent years as they defy the conventional reactions that follow minimum energy pathways. Instead, these reactions involve flat regions of the potential energy surface where molecular fragments remain weakly bound and participate in long-range interactions mediated by relatively weak forces. The neutral character of the roaming fragment and its indeterminate trajectory have made it difficult for experimental identification and systematic studies. We will present a novel time-resolved approach to image the roaming H2 neutrals leading to formation of H3+ ions, using coincident Coulomb explosion imaging in combination with pump-probe spectroscopy. We demonstrate that by reconstructing dynamical information about the ‘invisible’ neutral roamers, it is possible to directly track and observe experimental signatures of roaming. Along with state-of-the art quantum chemistry calculations, our measurements and analysis provide a robust, kinematically complete picture of the roaming mechanism in acetonitrile.
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Publication: Debadarshini Mishra*, Aaron C LaForge*, Lauren M Gorman, Sergio Díaz-Tendero, Fernando Martín, Nora Berrah, "Direct visualization of an elusive molecular reaction: Time-resolved H2 roaming in acetonitrile", arXiv:2303.04916 (2023)
Presenters
Debadarshini Mishra
University of Connecticut
Authors
Debadarshini Mishra
University of Connecticut
Aaron C LaForge
University of Connecticut
Lauren M Gorman
University of Connecticut
Sergio Diaz-Tendero
Departamento de Química, Módulo 13, Universidad Autónoma de Madrid, 28049 Madrid, Spain, Departamento de Química, Universidad Autónoma de Madrid, 28049 Madrid, Spain
Fernando Martín
Departamento de Química, Módulo 13, Universidad Autónoma de Madrid, 28049 Madrid, Spain
Nora Berrah
Uinversity of Connecticut, University of Connecticut