ON THE PHOTODISSOCIATION OF ALKALI-METAL HALIDES IN SOLUTION

Citation
Gh. Peslherbe et al., ON THE PHOTODISSOCIATION OF ALKALI-METAL HALIDES IN SOLUTION, Journal of the Chemical Society. Faraday transactions, 93(5), 1997, pp. 977-988
Citations number
97
Categorie Soggetti
Chemistry Physical","Physics, Atomic, Molecular & Chemical
ISSN journal
09565000
Volume
93
Issue
5
Year of publication
1997
Pages
977 - 988
Database
ISI
SICI code
0956-5000(1997)93:5<977:OTPOAH>2.0.ZU;2-8
Abstract
Gas-phase alkali-metal halide dissociation is influenced by the crossi ng of the covalent and ionic potential-energy surfaces at a certain in ternuclear separation, leading to interesting dynamical effects. The d issociation fragments for e.g. NaI may be trapped in a well formed by the avoided crossing of the covalent and ionic surfaces, and then unde rgo a non-adiabatic curve crossing transition to form atomic products. On the other hand, ionic products are stabilized by a polar environme nt and might be energetically accessible in solution. More generally, the photodissociation dynamics could be influenced by the solvent. A t heoretical study of NaI photodissociation in a weakly polar solvent is presented here to explore the mechanism and timescale by which the io ns are produced subsequent to photoexcitation. A solution-phase valenc e-bond resonance theory predicts that the diabatic ionic and covalent solution Gibbs free energy curves do not cross in the equilibrium solv ation regime, such that atomic products would result. When considering non-equilibrium solvation and dynamical effects, the theory indicates the short-time dissociation products in solution to be atoms, but tha t on the ms timescale they could convert to ions by activated inverted regime electron transfer (ET). However, the radiative lifetime is est imated to be much shorter (approximate to ns) than this timescale, so that in fact no excited state ET is expected. Instead, the formation o f ions proceeds by radiative deactivation of the photoexcited NaI and is followed by ionic recombination on the ground-state surface. Nevert heless it is estimated that the photodissociation of NaI in small clus ters may proceed via activated ET and lead to some ionic dissociation products.