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Ethylene, electron impact excitation

Energy Electron-Impact Excitation of the a State of Ethylene. [Pg.315]

On the other hand, the formation of ethylene was ascribed mainly to the unimolecular decomposition of a neutral excited propane molecule. These interpretations were later confirmed (4) by examining the effect of an applied electrical field on the neutral products in the radiolysis of propane. The yields of those products which were originally ascribed to ion-molecule reactions remained unchanged when the field strength was increased in the saturation current region while the yields of hydrocarbon products, which were ascribed to the decomposition of neutral excited propane molecules, increased several fold because of increased excitation by electron impact. In various recent radiolysis 14,17,18,34) and photoionization studies 26) of hydrocarbons, the origins of products from ion-molecule reactions or neutral excited molecule decompositions have been determined using the applied field technique. However, because of recent advances in vacuum ultraviolet photolysis and ion-molecule reaction kinetics, the technique used in the above studies has become somewhat superfluous. [Pg.272]

The photolysis of n-butane follows a pattern similar to that of propane, with many corresponding reactions. As found for previous hydrocarbons the photolysis includes both molecular and free-radical processes. The molecular elimination of Hj and Dj from C4H10-C4D10 mixtures was first shown by Sauer and Dorfman, who concluded that at 1470 A more than 90 % of the hydrogen came from molecular processes. On the basis of a study of the decomposition of excited -butane molecules generated by electron impact , they attributed hydrogen, methane, ethylene, and other hydrocarbon products to molecular processes, and concluded that free-radical reactions were minimal. [Pg.78]


See other pages where Ethylene, electron impact excitation is mentioned: [Pg.134]    [Pg.22]    [Pg.295]    [Pg.96]    [Pg.152]    [Pg.282]    [Pg.289]    [Pg.25]    [Pg.2368]    [Pg.149]    [Pg.139]    [Pg.201]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.134 , Pg.135 ]




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