A Free-Radical Prompted Barrierless Gas-Phase Synthesis of Pentacene

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Abstract

A representative, low-temperature gas-phase reaction mechanism synthesizing polyacenes via ring annulation exemplified by the formation of pentacene (C22H14) along with its benzo[a]tetracene isomer (C22H14) is unraveled by probing the elementary reaction of the 2-tetracenyl radical (C18H11.) with vinylacetylene (C4H4). The pathway to pentacene—a prototype polyacene and a fundamental molecular building block in graphenes, fullerenes, and carbon nanotubes—is facilitated by a barrierless, vinylacetylene mediated gas-phase process thus disputing conventional hypotheses that synthesis of polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs) solely proceeds at elevated temperatures. This low-temperature pathway can launch isomer-selective routes to aromatic structures through submerged reaction barriers, resonantly stabilized free-radical intermediates, and methodical ring annulation in deep space eventually changing our perception about the chemistry of carbon in our universe.

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Zhao, L., Kaiser, R. I., Lu, W., Ahmed, M., Evseev, M. M., Bashkirov, E. K., … Mebel, A. M. (2020). A Free-Radical Prompted Barrierless Gas-Phase Synthesis of Pentacene. Angewandte Chemie - International Edition, 59(28), 11334–11338. https://doi.org/10.1002/anie.202003402

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