Publication | Closed Access
Kinetics and Mechanisms of Aqueous Ozone Reactions with Bromide, Sulfite, Hydrogen Sulfite, Iodide, and Nitrite Ions
223
Citations
20
References
2001
Year
Polar SunriseAdvanced Oxidation ProcessEngineeringAtmospheric PhotochemistryNitrite IonsChemistryEnvironmental PhotochemistryEnvironmental ChemistryChemical EngineeringFirst OrderTemperature DependenciesAqueous Ozone ReactionsReaction IntermediateReaction ProcessOzone Layer DepletionHealth SciencesPhotochemistryCatalysisOzoneHydrogen SulfiteHalogenationChemical Kinetics
Reactions of ozone with Br(-), SO(3)(2-), HSO(3)(-), I(-), and NO(2)(-), studied by stopped-flow and pulsed-accelerated-flow techniques, are first order in the concentration of O(3)(aq) and first order in the concentration of each anion. The rate constants increase by a factor of 5 x 10(6) as the nucleophilicities of the anions increase from Br(-) to SO(3)(2-). Ozone adducts with the nucleophiles are proposed as steady-state intermediates prior to oxygen atom transfer with release of O(2). Ab initio calculations show possible structures for the intermediates. The reaction between Br(-) and O(3) is accelerated by H(+) but exhibits a kinetic saturation effect as the acidity increases. The kinetics indicate formation of BrOOO(-) as a steady-state intermediate with an acid-assisted step to give BrOH and O(2). Temperature dependencies of the reactions of Br(-) and HSO(3)(-) with O(3) in acidic solutions are determined from 1 to 25 degrees C. These kinetics are important in studies of annual ozone depletion in the Arctic troposphere at polar sunrise.
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