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Flash photolysis and spectroscopy. A new method for the study of free radical reactions
303
Citations
6
References
1950
Year
Abstract Photochemistry provides us with one of the most generally useful methods of studying the reactions of free radicals and atoms, but the concentration of these intermediates in the usual photochemical systems is too low to allow the use of direct physical methods of investigation such as absorption spectroscopy. To overcome this difficulty a new technique of flash photolysis and spectroscopy has been developed, using gas-filled flash discharge tubes of very high power. The properties of these lamps as spectroscopic and photochemical sources have been studied and details are given of their construction, spectra, duration of flash, and luminous efficiency in the photochemicaliy useful region. An apparatus is described which produces a very great photochemical change, in some cases over 80%, in one-thousandth of a second and in a gas at several cm. pressure contained in an absorption tube 1 m. long, and which photographs the absorption spectrum at high resolution in one twenty-thousandth of a second at short intervals afterwards. Examples of the rapidly changing spectra of substances undergoing reaction, including the spectra of some of the intermediate radicals involved, are shown. These include the recombination of chlorine atoms, the absorption Spectra of S2 and CS obtained during the photochemical decomposition of carbon disulphide and new spectra attributed to the CIO and CH3CO radicals.
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