Pinball at the atomic level

New intermediate discovered for the photodissociation of triiodide anion, a classic textbook reaction.

The photodissociation of triiodide anion (  ) is a classic textbook reaction that has been extensively studied both in solution and in gas phase. However, probing the ultrafast dynamics of this reaction in the solid state has proven challenging due to partial reversibility of the reaction and its sensitivity to experimental conditions. Now, a team of scientists from the Max Planck Institute for the Structure and Dynamics of Matter (MPSD) at CFEL (Center for Free-Electron Laser Science) in Hamburg and the University of Edinburgh, through improved sample handing, have discovered a new reaction intermediate, the tetraiodide radical anion (  ), formed as a result of the unique ordering of  in the crystal lattice to direct the dissociating I atom - in a process reminiscent of a quantum Newton's cradle, published in Nature Chemistry.

In the solution phase, the triiodide anions photodissociates predominantly into iodine radical ( ) and diiodide ( ) radicals. The surrounding solvent plays a passive role in the inertial confinement of the reaction products that ultimately undergo geminate and non-geminate recombination. In contrast, a dramatically different behavior was found in the ordered ionic lattice of tetra-n-butylammonium triiodide crystals. Here, the local geometry constrains the reaction and, hence, the primary photoproduct, iodine radical ( )), is guided by the lattice to form a bond with an adjacent ( )), giving rise to a secondary reaction product, the tetraiodide radical anion ( ) ), not described before for this reaction. As shown in in the igure, the reactants are literally aligned in the lattice to form this four-atom intermediate.

“The dissociated iodine atoms collide in a quantum type of a Newton’s cradle with other triiodide molecules to form this novel reaction product” explains Dwayne Miller, and he adds “most importantly, we have demonstrated that lattice can coherently direct the reaction pathway of solid-state photochemistry on femto- to picosecond time scales.”

This phenomenon was only observable thanks to new sample-handling, data collection and analysis techniques developed at the MPSD together with theoretical calculations carried out at the University of Edinburgh to support the electronic and vibrational assignments of the various reaction participants, which enabled the most detailed resolution to date of the reaction intermediates as well as the coherent modes driving the triiodide photodissociation reaction. “These observations provide a different conceptual framework to think about reaction processes and may point the way in how to couple chemical systems to a bath as a means to increase the length scales under chemical control”, concludes Miller.

 

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