4.2 Article

An ultrafast time-resolved infrared and UV-vis spectroscopic and computational study of the photochemistry of acyl azides

Journal

JOURNAL OF PHYSICAL ORGANIC CHEMISTRY
Volume 25, Issue 8, Pages 693-703

Publisher

WILEY-BLACKWELL
DOI: 10.1002/poc.2903

Keywords

acyl azide; computational chemistry; excited state; femtosecond spectroscopy; photochemistry

Funding

  1. National Science Foundation [CHE-0743258]
  2. Ohio State University
  3. Division Of Chemistry
  4. Direct For Mathematical & Physical Scien [0743258] Funding Source: National Science Foundation

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The photochemistry of pivaloyl, benzoyl, 4-phenylbenzoyl, and 2-anthroyl azides has been studied using femtosecond (fs) time-resolved infrared (TRIR) and UVvis spectroscopy and interpreted with the aid of computational chemistry. Density functional theory calculations revealed a significant difference in the nature of the lowest singlet excited state for these carbonyl azides. The lowest singlet excited states (S1) of p-phenylbenzoyl and 2-anthroyl azides are (p,p*) in nature, while the pivaloyl and benzoyl azides S1 states involve (n,p*) excitations. Nevertheless, for all acyl azides studied here, a similar, and intense, IR band at about 2100?cm-1 has been detected in the ultrafast TRIR experiments following 270?nm excitation. These bands were shifted to lower energy by about 100?cm-1 relative to the N3 stretching mode for the ground states of these azides. These 2100?cm-1 vibrational bands were assigned to the S1 states of acyl azides in agreement with density functional theory calculations. The decay of the acyl azide S1 states was described by bi-exponential functions. The fast component was attributed to the decay of the hot S1 state and the longer component to the decay of the thermally relaxed S1 state. A strong and broad transient absorption in the 350-650?nm spectral range was observed in the fs UVvis experiments for p-phenylbenzoyl and 2-anthroyl azides. The carrier of this absorption also decayed bi-exponentially, and the time constants were in excellent agreement with those found in the fs TRIR experiments. The slow component of the S1 state decay was found to be dependent on the solvent polarity. When the lifetime of the acyl azide S1 state is substantially longer than the time constant for vibrational cooling of nascent (hot) isocyanate, the correlation between the S1 decay and isocyanate formation was clear. The 270?nm excitation populates the Sn (n?=?2) states of these acyl azides. It was established that a hot nitrene is produced more efficiently from both the Sn and hot S1 states than from the relaxed S1 state of these acyl azides. Thus, time-resolved study provides direct experimental evidence that the S1 state is the precursor of nitrene only when the S1 state is pumped directly and when the S1 state lifetime is longer than the time constant of vibrational cooling of the newborn nitrene. All of these results are consistent with the data obtained recently for 2-napththoyl azide. Copyright (C) 2012 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.

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