4.7 Article

Investigation of attractive and repulsive interactions associated with ketones in supercritical CO2, based on Raman spectroscopy and theoretical calculations

期刊

JOURNAL OF CHEMICAL PHYSICS
卷 139, 期 5, 页码 -

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AMER INST PHYSICS
DOI: 10.1063/1.4817190

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  1. Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science, and Technology, Japan [16685001, 21350015]
  2. Japan Society for the Promotion of Science (JSPS) [GR073]

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Carbonyl compounds are solutes that are highly soluble in supercritical CO2 (scCO(2)). Their solubility governs the efficiency of chemical reactions, and is significantly increased by changing a chromophore. To effectively use scCO(2) as solvent, it is crucial to understand the high solubility of carbonyl compounds, the solvation structure, and the solute-solvent intermolecular interactions. We report Raman spectroscopic data, for three prototypical ketones dissolved in scCO(2), and four theoretical analyses. The vibrational Raman spectra of the C=O stretching modes of ketones (acetone, acetophenone, and benzophenone) were measured in scCO(2) along the reduced temperature T-r = T/T-c = 1.02 isotherm as a function of the reduced density rho(r) = rho/rho(c) in the range 0.05-1.5. The peak frequencies of the C=O stretching modes shifted toward lower energies as the fluid density increased. The density dependence was analyzed by using perturbed hard-sphere theory, and the shift was decomposed into attractive and repulsive energy components. The attractive energy between the ketones and CO2 was up to nine times higher than the repulsive energy, and its magnitude increased in the following order: acetone < acetophenone < benzophenone. The Mulliken charges of the three solutes and CO2 molecules obtained by using quantum chemistry calculations described the order of the magnitude of the attractive energy and optimized the relative configuration between each solute and CO2. According to theoretical calculations for the dispersion energy, the dipole-induced-dipole interaction energy, and the frequency shift due to their interactions, the experimentally determined attractive energy differences in the three solutes were attributed to the dispersion energies that depended on a chromophore attached to the carbonyl groups. It was found that the major intermolecular interaction with the attractive shift varied from dipole-induced dipole to dispersion depending on the chromophore in the ketones in scCO(2). As the common conclusion for the Raman spectral measurements and the four theoretical calculations, solute polarizability, modified by the chromophore, was at the core of the solute-solvent interactions of the ketones in scCO(2). (C) 2013 AIP Publishing LLC.

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