Unconventional gas-phase synthesis of biphenyl and its atropisomeric methyl-substituted derivatives

Shane J. Goettl, Chao He, Zhenghai Yang, Ralf I. Kaiser*, Ankit Somani, Adrian Portela-Gonzalez, Wolfram Sander*, Bing Jian Sun, Siti Fatimah, Komal P. Kadam, Agnes H.H. Chang*

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

The biphenyl molecule (C12H10) acts as a fundamental molecular backbone in the stereoselective synthesis of organic materials due to its inherent twist angle causing atropisomerism in substituted derivatives and in molecular mass growth processes in circumstellar environments and combustion systems. Here, we reveal an unconventional low-temperature phenylethynyl addition-cyclization-aromatization mechanism for the gas-phase preparation of biphenyl (C12H10) along with ortho-, meta-, and para-substituted methylbiphenyl (C13H12) derivatives through crossed molecular beams and computational studies providing compelling evidence on their formation via bimolecular gas-phase reactions of phenylethynyl radicals (C6H5CC, X2A1) with 1,3-butadiene-d6 (C4D6), isoprene (CH2C(CH3)CHCH2), and 1,3-pentadiene (CH2CHCHCHCH3). The dynamics involve de-facto barrierless phenylethynyl radical additions via submerged barriers followed by facile cyclization and hydrogen shift prior to hydrogen atom emission and aromatization to racemic mixtures (ortho, meta) of biphenyls in overall exoergic reactions. These findings not only challenge our current perception of biphenyls as high temperature markers in combustion systems and astrophysical environments, but also identify biphenyls as fundamental building blocks of complex polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs) such as coronene (C24H12) eventually leading to carbonaceous nanoparticles (soot, grains) in combustion systems and in deep space thus affording critical insight into the low-temperature hydrocarbon chemistry in our universe.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)18321-18332
Number of pages12
JournalPhysical Chemistry Chemical Physics
Volume26
Issue number26
DOIs
StatePublished - 24 Jun 2024
Externally publishedYes

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