Photolysis of HBr at 77 °K

The photolysis of HBr has been studied at 77 °K. The photodecomposition of solid state HBr is an inefficient process which is strongly inhibited by a reaction product, probably Br atoms, or by added Br 2 or trans-butene-2. The results suggest H 2 is formed by abstraction from HBr by thermal H atoms,...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inCanadian journal of chemistry Vol. 46; no. 24; pp. 3789 - 3798
Main Authors Falconer, W. E, Sunder, W. A
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Ottawa, Canada NRC Research Press 15.12.1968
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Summary:The photolysis of HBr has been studied at 77 °K. The photodecomposition of solid state HBr is an inefficient process which is strongly inhibited by a reaction product, probably Br atoms, or by added Br 2 or trans-butene-2. The results suggest H 2 is formed by abstraction from HBr by thermal H atoms, the activation energy for the abstraction being ~350 cal mole −1 . The photolysis of both pure HBr and HBr with added Br 2 or trans-butene-2 can be described by an absorber complex mechanism similar to that inferred by Hughes and Purnell in the photolysis of HI. The absorption tail of solid HBr extends beyond the gas phase absorption into the wavelength region in which trapped radicals are generated in HBr-olefin mixtures but where there is no H 2 evolution. The solid state absorption spectrum of Br 2 is contrasted with that of gaseous Br 2 ; an absorption peak is observed at 2725 Å which may be associated with (Br 2 ) n aglomerates.
ISSN:0008-4042
1480-3291
DOI:10.1139/v68-630