Journal of the American Chemical Society, Vol.130, No.10, 3137-3142, 2008
Spectroscopic observation of the resonance-stabilized 1-phenylpropargyl radical
The gas-phase laser-induced fluorescence (LIF) spectrum of a 1-phenylpropargyl radical has been identified in the region 20800-22000 cm(-1) in a free jet. The radical was produced from discharges of hydrocarbons including benzene. Disregarding C-2, C-3, and CH, this radical appears as the most strongly fluorescing product in a visible wavelength two-dimensional fluorescence excitation-emission spectrum of a jet-cooled benzene discharge. The structure of the carrier was elucidated by measurement of a matching resonant two-color two-photon ionization spectrum at m/z = 115 and density functional theory. The assignment was proven conclusively by observation of the same excitation spectrum from a low-current discharge of 3-phenyl-1-propyne. The apparent great abundance of the 1-phenylpropargyl radical in discharges of benzene and, more importantly, 1-hexyne may further underpin the proposed importance of the propargyl radical in the formation of complex hydrocarbons in combustion and circumstellar environments.