At 295 K the esoiv" absorption peak Emax and the width of the band at half height W1/2 were respectively 1.95 and 1.3 eV in methanol and 1.80 and 1.4 eV in ethanol. At temperatures between 170 and 350 K, dEmax/ dT = -2.6 x 1CT3 eV/deg in methanol and -3.2 X 10~3 eV/deg in ethanol. Increasing T increased W%/2 slightly. The shifts in £max caused by changing the temperature or pressure (up to 6000 atm) in a given liquid (alcohol or water) correlate with the product of the dielectric constant and the density, ed. Plots of Emax vs. ed overlap for methanol and ethanol, but the curve for water falls at higher values of ed for a given Emax. Electron-solvent short range interactions appear to be important in determining Emax. The esoiv" spectra were not changed in shape by addition of up to 1.4 M KOH. The height of the absorption band increased with increasing base concentration due to scavenging of Hsoiv+ in the spurs. The molar absorbancy (deeadic) coefficient of e80iv" was independent of temperature: e(Amax) (10.2 ± 0.4) x 103 AT"1 cm"1 in methanol,_ (9.4 =fc 0.4) x 103 in ethanol and (18.9 ± 0.6) X 10s in water. The oscillator strength of esoiv ", corrected for the refractive index of the solvent, is 0.4 in methanol and ethanol and 0.6 in water and ammonia.
The value of the rate constant kl for the reaction e-s,lv + RO-s,lv + H, [I], at 295 K and 1 bar is 51.4 X lo5 s-1 in methanol and 5 8 X 104 s-1 in ethanol. The respective volumes of activation averaged between 1 bar and 2 kbar are AVl* 2 -21 and 5 -22 cm3 mol-1. A high concentration of potassium hydroxide (1 M) or water (5 M) decreases the apparent value of kl somewhat but has little or no effect on the value of AV,". The effect of pressure on the rate constant of e-s,lv + S + product, [2], was also measured for a series of solutes that displays a wide range of reactivity. Experimental values of AV2* depend on the relative contributions of the effects of solvent density on the reactant diffusion rates, the concentrations of the actual reacting species, and the relative energies of the reactant and intermediate states. For reactions whose rates are near the diffusion controlled limit, k2 = 10'0 M-1 s-1 in methanol and ethanol, the values of AV2' are positive and similar to those for the diffusion of simple ions. AV* (e-s,!v diffusion) = 4 cml mol-1 in methanol and 6 cml mol-1 in ethanol. Cadmium chlor~de IS apparently not completely dissociated in alcohols, and k(e-s,lv + CdC12) < k(e-s,lv + CdCl+) < k(e-,,lv + Cd2+). For a series of compounds with lower rate constants there is a correlation between log k2 and AVz*, the latter being negative for very low values of k2. The products of electron capture by benzene, toluene, ethyl acetate, and possibly acetonitrile appear to be stabilized by protonation: e-,,,I,. + S = S-,,lv, 13, -31,; S-s,lv + ROH + SH + ,I,,[4]. The results indicate that the decomposition of e-s,lv in a pure alcohol occurs by protonatlon of the electron site, e-s,lv + ROH -t H + RO-,,,,, 14'1, rather than by electron transfer to an alcohol molecule followed by decomposition of the anion. [Traduit par le journal]
The rates of reactions I and 2 are diffusion controlled in alcohols e;,, + HL,, +neutralization RO,,, + HA,, -* ROH In water reaction 1 is slower and reaction 2 (where RO-is HO-) is faster than one would estimate from the Debye equation for diffusion controlled reactions. The solvent dependence of the relative values of k, and k, is attributed to the solvent dependence of the structures of H;,,, RO,,,, and e;,,; H f and RO-are strong solvent structure makers in alcohols and in water, whereas e-is a weak solvent structure maker in alcohols and a strong structure breaker in water. Effects of the solvent structure making and breaking properties of ions on their reaction rates have been proposed by Gurney and Frank.Les vitesses des rtactions 1 et 2 dans les alcools sont contr6lees par la diffusion e;,, + HL,, +neutralization RO,,, + HA,, + ROH Dans l'eau reaction I est moins rapide et reaction 2 (oh RO-est HO-) est plus rapide que la vitesse estimee a partir de l'equation de Debye pour les reactions contr6lees par la diffusion. L'effet du solvant sur les valeurs relatives de k, et k, est attribue i la configuration de solvatation des ions HA,,, RO;,,, et e;,,: H + et RO--augmentent la structure locale du solvant dans le voisinage des ions; e-pourrait augmenter un peu la structure dans un alcool, mais il la detruit dans I'eau. Gurney et Frank ont propose un effet des ions sur la structure du solvant qui augmenterait ou diminuerait la vitesse "normale" d'une reaction.
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