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Hydroperoxyalkylperoxy (OOQOOH) radicals are important intermediates in combustion chemistry. The conventional isomerization of OOQOOH radicals to form ketohydroperoxides has been long believed to be the most important chain branching reaction under the low-temperature combustion conditions. In this work, the kinetics of competing pathways (alternative isomerization, concerted elimination, and H-exchange pathways) to the conventional isomerization of different β-, γ- and Δ-OOQOOH butane isomers are investigated. Six- and seven-membered ring conventional isomerizations are found to be the dominant pathways, whereas alternative isomerizations are more important than conventional isomerization, when the latter proceeded via a more strained transition state ring. The oxygen atoms in OOQOOH radicals introduce intramolecular hydrogen bonding (HB) that significantly affects the energies of reacting species and transition states, ultimately influencing chemical kinetics. Conceptually, HB has a dual effect on the stability of chemical species, the first being the stabilizing effect of the actual intramolecular HB force, and the second being the destabilizing effect of ring strain imposed by the HB conformer. The overall effect can be quantified by determining the difference between the minimum energy conformers of a chemical species or transition state that have HB and that do not have HB (non-hydrogen bonding (NHB)). The stabilization effect of HB on the species and transition sates is assessed, and its effect on the calculated rate constants is also considered. Our results show that, for most species and transition states, HB stabilizes their energies by as much as 2.5 kcal/mol. However, NHB conformers are found to be more stable by up to 2.7 kcal/mol for a few of the considered species. To study the effect of HB on rate constants, reactions are categorized into two groups ( groups one and two) based on the structural similarity of the minimum energy conformers of the reactant and transition state, for a particular reaction. For cases where the reactant and transition state conformers are similar (i.e., both HB or NHB structures), group one, the effect of HB on reaction kinetics is major only if the magnitudes of the stabilization energy of the reactant and transition state are quite different. Meanwhile, for group two, where the reactant and transition state prefer different conformers (one HB and the other NHB), HB affects the kinetics when the stabilization energy of the reactant or transition state is significant or the entropy effect is important. This information is useful in determining corrections accounting for HB effects when assigning rate parameters for chemical reactions using estimation and/or analogy, where analogies usually result in inaccuracies when modeling atmospheric and combustion processes.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acs.jpca.8b04415 | DOI Listing |
J Org Chem
September 2025
Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry, The University of Tulsa, 800 S. Tucker Dr., Tulsa, Oklahoma 74104, United States.
A screening of organic dyes has led to the discovery of gallocyanine as an organocatalyst for the halogenation of a variety of functionalized pyrazoles, indazoles, and aromatics. This work provides an example of a mild organocatalyst that does not require light, oxidizing agents, transition-metal activation, or high temperatures. Thirty-nine halogenated pyrazoles and indazoles, including pharmaceuticals such as celecoxib, deracoxib, and antipyrine, have been isolated in good to excellent yields using -halosuccinimides as the stoichiometric halogen source with gallocyanine as the catalyst.
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August 2025
University of Texas at Austin, Department of Physics, Austin, Texas 78712, USA.
We show that the ground state of a weakly charged two-dimensional electron-hole fluid in a strong magnetic field is a broken translation symmetry state with interpenetrating lattices of localized vortices and antivortices in the electron-hole-pair field. The vortices and antivortices carry fractional charges of equal sign but unequal magnitude and have a honeycomb-lattice structure that contrasts with the triangular lattices of superconducting electron-electron-pair vortex lattices. We predict that increasing charge density or a weakening magnetic field drives a vortex delocalization transition that would be signaled experimentally by an abrupt increase in counterflow transport resistance.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPhys Rev Lett
August 2025
RIKEN Center for Quantum Computing, 2-1 Hirosawa, Wako, Saitama 351-0198, Japan.
We present a method for probing the quantum capacitance associated with the Rydberg transition of surface electrons on liquid helium using radio-frequency (rf) reflectometry. Resonant microwave excitation of the Rydberg transition induces a redistribution of image charges on capacitively coupled electrodes, giving rise to a quantum capacitance originating from adiabatic state transitions and the finite curvature of the energy bands. By applying frequency-modulated resonant microwaves to drive the Rydberg transition, we systematically measured a capacitance sensitivity of 0.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPhys Rev Lett
August 2025
Nanjing University of Aeronautics and Astronautics, State Key Laboratory of Mechanics and Control for Aerospace Structures and Key Laboratory for Intelligent Nano Materials and Devices of the Ministry of Education, Institute of Nano Science, Nanjing, 210016, China.
Multistate ferroelectric polarization holds promise for realizing high-density nonvolatile memory devices, but so far is restricted to a few traditional ferroelectrics. Here, we show that nanoconfined two-dimensional (2D) ferroelectric ice can achieve phase-dependent multistate polarization through extensive classical and ab initio molecular dynamics simulations. An in-plane electric field is found to induce the reversible transition between a low-polarization AA-stacked hexagonal ice phase and an unprecedented high-polarization AB-stacked ice phase, resulting in a four-state ferroelectric switching pathway.
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August 2025
Universität Innsbruck, Institut für Experimentalphysik, Technikerstrasse 25, 6020 Innsbruck, Austria.
Establishing networks of quantum processors offers a path to scalable quantum computing and applications in communication and sensing. This requires first developing efficient interfaces between photons and multiqubit registers. In this Letter, we show how to entangle each individual matter qubit in a register of ten to a separate traveling photon.
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