Kinetic Study of the Gas-Phase Reaction between Atomic Carbon and Acetone. Low Temperature Rate Constants and Hydrogen Atom Product Yields
Kevin M. Hickson, Jean-Christophe Loison, Valentine Wakelam

TL;DR
This study investigates the gas-phase reaction between atomic carbon and acetone at low temperatures, measuring rate constants and product yields, and explores its impact on interstellar acetone abundance in astrochemical models.
Contribution
It provides the first experimental and theoretical analysis of the C(3P) + acetone reaction, including rate constants and reaction pathways relevant to astrochemistry.
Findings
Rate constants are large and weakly temperature-dependent.
Reaction is barrierless and significantly reduces interstellar acetone levels.
Recommended temperature-independent rate constant for astrochemical models.
Abstract
The reactions of ground state atomic carbon, C(3P), are likely to be important in astrochemistry due to the high abundance levels of these atoms in the dense interstellar medium. Here we present a study of the gas-phase reaction between C(3P) and acetone, CH3COCH3. Experimentally, rate constants were measured for this process over the 50 to 296 K range using a continuous-flow supersonic reactor, while secondary measurements of H(2S) atom formation were also performed over the 75 to 296 K range to elucidate the preferred product channels. C(3P) atoms were generated by In-situ pulsed photolysis of carbon tetrabromide, while both C(3P) and H(2S) atoms were detected by pulsed laser induced fluorescence. Theoretically, quantum chemical calculations were performed to obtain the various complexes, adducts and transition states involved in the C(3P) + CH3COCH3 reaction over the 3A'' potential…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAtmospheric Ozone and Climate · Advanced Chemical Physics Studies · Spectroscopy and Laser Applications
