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Electron transfer ionization

For the reaction of aluminium with oxygen, only electron-transfer ionization was observed ... [Pg.562]

McCarley, T. D. McCarley, R. L. Limbach, P. A. Electron-transfer ionization in matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization mass spectrometry. Anal. Chem. 1998, 70, 4376 379. [Pg.182]

The distortion caused by the field allows an electron to pass from the molecule to the tip if the applied potential is positive or from the tip to the molecule if the potential is negative. This is called field ionization (FI), and the electron transfer occurs through quantum tunneling. Little or no vibrational excitation occurs, and the ionization is described as mild or soft. [Pg.386]

Although it is conceptually useful to think of two successive processes following the initial ionization to A, the electron transfer and the generation of the Auger electron occur simultaneously. [Pg.316]

The cation—radical intermediate loses a proton to become, in this case, a benzyl radical. The relative rate of attack (via electron transfer) on an aromatic aldehyde with respect to a corresponding methylarene is a function of the ionization potentials (8.8 eV for toluene, 9.5 eV for benzaldehyde) it is much... [Pg.344]

The possible mechanism of ionization, fragmentation of studied compound as well as their desoi ption by laser radiation is discussed. It is shown that the formation of analyte ions is a result of a multi stage complex process included surface activation by laser irradiation, the adsoi ption of neutral analyte and proton donor molecules, the chemical reaction on the surface with proton or electron transfer, production of charged complexes bonded with the surface and finally laser desoi ption of such preformed molecules. [Pg.103]

According to the ionization potential and electron-transfer work, alkali metals form the following series Li > Na > K, and their hydroxides are arranged in the sequence KOH > NaOH > LiOH as to their inhibitive efficiency relative to thermal destruction of polyolefins. And the efficiency of alkali metals can be represented by the sequence Na > K > Li. This seems to be due... [Pg.86]

Let us discuss now the conditions required for the electron transfer process. This reaction requires, of course, a suitable electron donor (a species characterized by a low ionization potential) and a proper electron acceptor, e.g., a monomer characterized by a high electron affinity. Furthermore, the nature of the solvent is often critical for such a reaction. The solvation energy of ions contributes substantially to the heat of reaction, hence the reaction might occur in a strong solvating solvent, but its course may be reversed in a poorly solvating medium. A good example of this behavior is provided by the reaction Na -f- naphthalene -> Na+ + naphthalene". This reaction proceeds rapidly in tetrahydrofuran or in dimethoxy... [Pg.150]

Reactions of Complex Ions. For reactions of systems containing H2 or HD the failure to observe an E 1/2 dependence of reaction cross-section was probably the result of the failure to include all products of ion-molecule reaction in the calculation of the experimental cross-sections. For reactions of complex molecule ions where electron impact ionization probably produces a distribution of vibrationally excited states, kinetic energy transfer can readily open channels which yield products obscured by primary ionization processes. In such cases an E n dependence of cross-section may be determined frequently n = 1 has been found. [Pg.105]

The low solubility of fullerene (Ceo) in common organic solvents such as THE, MeCN and DCM interferes with its functionalization, which is a key step for its synthetic applications. Solid state photochemistry is a powerful strategy for overcoming this difficulty. Thus a 1 1 mixture of Cgo and 9-methylanthra-cene (Equation 4.10, R = Me) exposed to a high-pressure mercury lamp gives the adduct 72 (R = Me) with 68% conversion [51]. No 9-methylanthracene dimers were detected. Anthracene does not react with Ceo under these conditions this has been correlated to its ionization potential which is lower than that of the 9-methyl derivative. This suggests that the Diels-Alder reaction proceeds via photo-induced electron transfer from 9-methylanthracene to the triplet excited state of Ceo-... [Pg.168]

Radicals can be prepared from closed-shell systems by adding or removing one electron or by a dissociative fission. Generally speaking, the electron addition or abstraction can be performed with any system, the ionization potential and electron affinity being thermodynamic measures of the probability with which these processes should proceed. Thus, to accomplish this electron transfer, a sufficiently powerful electron donor or acceptor (low ionization potential and high electron affinity, respectively) is required. If the process does not proceed in the gas phase, a suitable solvent may succeed. [Pg.329]

Experiments and calculations both indicate that electron transfer from potassium to water is spontaneous and rapid, whereas electron transfer from silver to water does not occur. In redox terms, potassium oxidizes easily, but silver resists oxidation. Because oxidation involves the loss of electrons, these differences in reactivity of silver and potassium can be traced to how easily each metal loses electrons to become an aqueous cation. One obvious factor is their first ionization energies, which show that it takes much more energy to remove an electron from silver than from potassium 731 kJ/mol for Ag and 419 kJ/mol for K. The other alkali metals with low first ionization energies, Na, Rb, Cs, and Fr, all react violently with water. [Pg.1369]

Hyun et al. [345] prepared PbS Q-dots in a suspension and tethered them to Ti02 nanoparticles with a bifunctional thiol-carboxyl linker molecule. Strong size dependence due to quantum confinement was inferred from cyclic voltammetry measurements, for the electron affinity and ionization potential of the attached Q-dots. On the basis of the measured energy levels, the authors claimed that pho-toexcited electrons should transfer efficiently from PbS into T1O2 only for dot diameters below 4.3 nm. Continuous-wave fluorescence spectra and fluorescence transients of the PbS/Ti02 assembly were consistent with electron transfer from small Q-dots. The measured charge transfer time was surprisingly slow ( 100 ns). Implications of this fact for future photovoltaics were discussed, while initial results from as-fabricated sensitized solar cells were presented. [Pg.290]

Colloids of a-FejOj are made by hydrolysis of FeClj and subsequent dialysis of the sol. Polyvinyl alcohol is often used as a stabilizing agent. The band gap in Fe203 is 2.2 eV. In some of the studies on colloidal Fc203 free radicals were generated by ionizing radiation and electron transfer reactions with the colloidal particles investigated. Buxton et al. observed a cathodic dissolution of a-FCjOj in acidic... [Pg.159]

The ionization energies of hydrogen (15.4 eV) and argon (15.8 eV) are higher than those of silane (11.6 eV) and disilane (9.9 eV). Therefore, ion-molecule reactions of H2 or Ar+ with silane or disilane will result in electron transfer from... [Pg.101]


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See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.19 ]




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Ionization transfer

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