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Polycyclic cyclic voltammetry

With stringent precautions to avoid the presence of water, polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons show two one-electron reversible waves on cyclic voltammetry in dimethylformamide (Table 7.1). These are due to sequential one-electron additions to the lowest unoccupied molecular n-orbital [1]. Hydrocarbons with a single benzene ring are reduced at very negative potentials outside the accessible range in this solvent. Radical-anions of polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons [2] and also alkyl benzenes [3] were first obtained by the action of alkali metals on a solution of the hydrocarbon in tetrahydrofuran. They have been well characterised by esr spectroscopy. The radical-anions form coloured solutions with absorption bands at longer wavelength than the parent hydrocarbon [4,5]. [Pg.239]

The delocalised radical formed by protonation of the radical-anion is more easily reduced than the starting arene. For some polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons, the redox potential for this radical species can be determined using a cyclic voltammetry technique [10]. Reduction in dimethylformamide is carried out to the potential for formation of the dianion. The dianion undergoes rapid monoprotonation and on the reverse sweep at a fast scan rate, oxidation of the monoanion to the radical can be observed. The radical intermediate from pyrene has E° = -1.15 V vs. see in dimethylformamide compared to E° = -2.13 V vs. see for pyrene,... [Pg.240]

Cyclic voltammetry data for the Ni(II) complexes of monocyclic ligands 1-7 and of polycyclic ligands 9-14 are summarized in Table... [Pg.112]


See other pages where Polycyclic cyclic voltammetry is mentioned: [Pg.21]    [Pg.670]    [Pg.264]    [Pg.78]    [Pg.391]    [Pg.149]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.570 ]




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Cyclic voltammetry

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