Benzofuran (BF), benzothiophene (BT), indole (IN), dibenzofuran (DBF), dibenzothiophene (DBT), and carbazole (CA) are typical heterocyclic aromatic compounds (NSO-HETs), which can coexist with polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs) in combustion and pyrolysis conditions. In this work, quantum chemical calculations were carried out to investigate the formation of DBF, DBT, and CA from the reactions of BF, BT, and IN with a cyclopentadienyl radical (CPDyl) by using the hybrid density functional theory (DFT) at the MPWB1K/6-311+G(3df,2p)//MPWB1K/6-31+G(d,p) level. The rate constants of crucial elementary steps were deduced over 600−1200 K, using canonical variational transition state theory with a small-curvature tunneling contribution (CVT/SCT). This paper showed that the production of DBF, DBT, and CA from the reactions of BF, BT, and IN with CPDyl involved six elementary steps: the addition reaction, ring closure, the first H shift, C–C cleavage, the second H shift, and elimination of CH3 or H. The cleavage of the C–C bond was regarded as the rate-determining step for each pathway due to the extremely high barrier. The 1-methyl substituted products were more easily formed than the 4-methyl substituted products. The main products were DBF and 1-methyl-DBF, DBT and 1-methyl-DBT, and CA and 1-methyl-CA for reactions of BF, BT, and IN with CPDyl, respectively. The ranking of DBF, DBT, and CA formation potential was as follows: DBT and methyl-DBT formation > DBF and methyl-DBF formation > CA, and methyl-CA formation. Comparison with the reaction of naphthalene with CPDyl indicated that the reactions of CPDyl attacking a benzene ring and a furan/thiophene/pyrrole ring could be inferred to be comparable under high temperature conditions.
CITATION STYLE
Li, X., Gao, Y., Zuo, C., Zheng, S., Xu, F., Sun, Y., & Zhang, Q. (2019). The gas-phase formation mechanism of dibenzofuran (DBF), dibenzothiophene (DBT), and carbazole (ca) from benzofuran (BF), benzothiophene (BT), and indole (IN) with cyclopentadienyl radical. International Journal of Molecular Sciences, 20(21). https://doi.org/10.3390/ijms20215420
Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.