Sorbic Acid as a Triplet Probe: Reactivity of Oxidizing Triplets in Dissolved Organic Matter by Direct Observation of Aromatic Amine Oxidation

Open access
Date
2019-07-16Type
- Journal Article
Abstract
Sorbic acid (2,4-hexadienoic acid; HDA) isomerization is frequently used to probe triplet-state dissolved organic matter (3CDOM*) reactivity, but there remain open questions about the reaction kinetics of 3CDOM* with HDA due to the difficulties of directly measuring 3CDOM* quenching rate constants. Using our recently developed approach based on observing the radical cation of N,N,N′,N′-tetramethyl-p-phenylenediamine (TMPD) formed through oxidation of TMPD by 3CDOM*, we studied 3CDOM* quenching kinetics with HDA monitored via transient absorption spectroscopy. A competition kinetics-based approach utilizing formation yields of TMPD•+ was developed, validated with model sensitizers, and used to determine bimolecular rate constants between 3CDOM* oxidants and HDA for diverse DOM isolates and natural waters samples, yielding values in the range of (2.4–7.7) × 108 M–1 s–1. The unquenchable fraction of TMPD-oxidizing triplets showed that, on average, 41% of 3CDOM* oxidants cannot be quenched by HDA. Conversely, cycloheptatriene quenched nearly all TMPD•+-forming triplets in CDOM, suggesting that most 3CDOM* oxidants possess energies greater than 150 kJ mol–1. Comparing results with our companion study, we found slight, but noticeable differences in the 3CDOM* quenching rate constants by HDA and unquenchable triplet fractions determined by oxidation of TMPD and energy transfer to O2 (1O2 formation) methods. Show more
Permanent link
https://doi.org/10.3929/ethz-b-000356719Publication status
publishedExternal links
Journal / series
Environmental Science & TechnologyVolume
Pages / Article No.
Publisher
American Chemical SocietyOrganisational unit
03850 - McNeill, Kristopher / McNeill, Kristopher
Funding
156198 - Electron transfer properties of photoexcited natural organic matter (SNF)
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