Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Aaron M. Thomas is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Aaron M. Thomas.


ChemPhysChem | 2017

A Free‐Radical Pathway to Hydrogenated Phenanthrene in Molecular Clouds—Low Temperature Growth of Polycyclic Aromatic Hydrocarbons

Aaron M. Thomas; Michael Lucas; Tao Yang; Ralf I. Kaiser; Luis Fuentes; Daniel Belisario-Lara; Alexander M. Mebel

The hydrogen-abstraction/acetylene-addition mechanism has been fundamental to unravelling the synthesis of polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs) detected in combustion flames and carbonaceous meteorites like Orgueil and Murchison. However, the fundamental reaction pathways accounting for the synthesis of complex PAHs, such as the tricyclic anthracene and phenanthrene along with their dihydrogenated counterparts, remain elusive to date. By investigating the hitherto unknown chemistry of the 1-naphthyl radical with 1,3-butadiene, we reveal a facile barrierless synthesis of dihydrophenanthrene adaptable to low temperatures. These aryl-type radical additions to conjugated hydrocarbons via resonantly stabilized free-radical intermediates defy conventional wisdom that PAH growth is predominantly a high-temperature phenomenon and thus may represent an overlooked path to PAHs as complex as coronene and corannulene in cold regions of the interstellar medium like in the Taurus Molecular Cloud.


Nature Communications | 2018

Directed gas phase formation of silicon dioxide and implications for the formation of interstellar silicates

Tao Yang; Aaron M. Thomas; Beni B. Dangi; Ralf I. Kaiser; Alexander M. Mebel; T. J. Millar

Interstellar silicates play a key role in star formation and in the origin of solar systems, but their synthetic routes have remained largely elusive so far. Here we demonstrate in a combined crossed molecular beam and computational study that silicon dioxide (SiO2) along with silicon monoxide (SiO) can be synthesized via the reaction of the silylidyne radical (SiH) with molecular oxygen (O2) under single collision conditions. This mechanism may provide a low-temperature path—in addition to high-temperature routes to silicon oxides in circumstellar envelopes—possibly enabling the formation and growth of silicates in the interstellar medium necessary to offset the fast silicate destruction.Interstellar silicates play a key role in star formation, however their synthetic routes are not fully understood. Here, the authors provide evidence for the formation of SiO2 along with SiO via low-temperature gas phase chemistry.


Journal of Physical Chemistry A | 2016

Formation of the 2,3-Dimethyl-1-silacycloprop-2-enylidene Molecule via the Crossed Beam Reaction of the Silylidyne Radical (SiH; X2Π) with Dimethylacetylene (CH3CCCH3; X1A1g)

Tao Yang; Aaron M. Thomas; Beni B. Dangi; Ralf I. Kaiser; Mei-Hung Wu; Bing-Jian Sun; Agnes H. H. Chang

We carried out crossed molecular beam experiments and electronic structure calculations to unravel the chemical dynamics of the reaction of the silylidyne(-d1) radical (SiH/SiD; X(2)Π) with dimethylacetylene (CH3CCCH3; X(1)A1g). The chemical dynamics were indirect and initiated by the barrierless addition of the silylidyne radical to both carbon atoms of dimethylacetylene forming a cyclic collision complex 2,3-dimethyl-1-silacyclopropenyl. This complex underwent unimolecular decomposition by atomic hydrogen loss from the silicon atom via a loose exit transition state to form the novel 2,3-dimethyl-1-silacycloprop-2-enylidene isomer in an overall exoergic reaction (experimentally: -29 ± 21 kJ mol(-1); computationally: -10 ± 8 kJ mol(-1)). An evaluation of the scattering dynamics of silylidyne with alkynes indicates that in each system, the silylidyne radical adds barrierlessly to one or to both carbon atoms of the acetylene moiety, yielding an acyclic or a cyclic collision complex, which can also be accessed via cyclization of the acyclic structures. The cyclic intermediate portrays the central decomposing complex, which fragments via hydrogen loss almost perpendicularly to the rotational plane of the decomposing complex exclusively from the silylidyne moiety via a loose exit transition state in overall weakly exoergic reaction leading to ((di)methyl-substituted) 1-silacycloprop-2-enylidenes (-1 to -13 kJ mol(-1) computationally; -12 ± 11 to -29 ± 21 kJ mol(-1) experimentally). Most strikingly, the reaction dynamics of the silylidyne radical with alkynes are very different from those of C1-C4 alkanes and C2-C4 alkenes, which do not react with the silylidyne radical at the collision energies under our crossed molecular beam apparatus, due to either excessive entrance barriers to reaction (alkanes) or overall highly endoergic reaction processes (alkenes). Nevertheless, molecules carrying carbon-carbon double bonds could react, if the carbon-carbon double bond is either consecutive like in allene (H2CCCH2) or in conjugation with another carbon-carbon double bond (conjugated dienes) as found, for instance, in 1,3-butadiene (H2CCHCHCH2).


Angewandte Chemie | 2016

Gas‐Phase Synthesis of 1‐Silacyclopenta‐2,4‐diene

Tao Yang; Beni B. Dangi; Aaron M. Thomas; Bing-Jian Sun; Tzu‐Jung Chou; Agnes H. H. Chang; Ralf I. Kaiser

Silole (1-silacyclopenta-2,4-diene) was synthesized for the first time by the bimolecular reaction of the simplest silicon-bearing radical, silylidyne (SiH), with 1,3-butadiene (C4 H6 ) in the gas phase under single-collision conditions. The absence of consecutive collisions of the primary reaction product prevents successive reactions of the silole by Diels-Alder dimerization, thus enabling the clean gas-phase synthesis of this hitherto elusive cyclic species from acyclic precursors in a single-collision event. Our method opens up a versatile and unconventional path to access a previously rather obscure class of organosilicon molecules (substituted siloles), which have been difficult to access through classical synthetic methods.


Journal of Physical Chemistry Letters | 2018

Bimolecular Reaction Dynamics in the Phenyl–Silane System: Exploring the Prototype of a Radical Substitution Mechanism

Michael Lucas; Aaron M. Thomas; Tao Yang; Ralf I. Kaiser; Alexander M. Mebel; Diptarka Hait; Martin Head-Gordon

We present a combined experimental and theoretical investigation of the bimolecular gas-phase reaction of the phenyl radical (C6H5) with silane (SiH4) under single collision conditions to investigate the chemical dynamics of forming phenylsilane (C6H5SiH3) via a bimolecular radical substitution mechanism at a tetracoordinated silicon atom. Verified by electronic structure and quasiclassical trajectory calculations, the replacement of a single carbon atom in methane by silicon lowers the barrier to substitution, thus defying conventional wisdom that tetracoordinated hydrides undergo preferentially hydrogen abstraction. This reaction mechanism provides fundamental insights into the hitherto unexplored gas-phase chemical dynamics of radical substitution reactions of mononuclear main group hydrides under single collision conditions and highlights the distinct reactivity of silicon compared to its isovalent carbon. This mechanism might be also involved in the synthesis of cyanosilane (SiH3CN) and methylsilane (CH3SiH3) probed in the circumstellar envelope of the carbon star IRC+10216.


Journal of Physical Chemistry A | 2018

A Combined Experimental and Computational Study on the Reaction Dynamics of the 1-Propynyl (CH3CC) - Acetylene (HCCH) System and the Formation of Methyldiacetylene (CH3CCCCH)

Aaron M. Thomas; Long Zhao; Chao He; Alexander M. Mebel; Ralf I. Kaiser

We investigated the 1-propynyl (CH3CC; X2A1) plus acetylene/acetylene- d2 (HCCH/DCCD; X1Σg+) under single-collision conditions using the crossed molecular beams method. The reaction was found to produce C5H4 plus atomic hydrogen (H) via an indirect reaction mechanism with a reaction energy of -123 ± 18 kJ mol-1. Using the DCCD isotopologue, we confirmed that the hydrogen atom is lost from the acetylene reactant. Our computational analysis suggests the reaction proceeds by the barrierless addition of the 1-propynyl radical to acetylene, resulting in C5H5 intermediate(s) that dissociate preferentially to methyldiacetylene (CH3CCCCH; X1A1) via hydrogen atom emission with a computed reaction energy of -123 ± 4 kJ mol-1. The barrierless nature of this reaction scheme suggests the 1-propynyl radical may be a key intermediate in hydrocarbon chain growth in cold molecular clouds like TMC-1, where methyl-substituted (poly)acetylenes are known to exist.


Journal of Physical Chemistry Letters | 2017

Gas-Phase Synthesis of the Elusive Trisilicontetrahydride Species (Si3H4)

Tao Yang; Beni B. Dangi; Aaron M. Thomas; Ralf I. Kaiser; Bing-Jian Sun; Monika Staś; Agnes H. H. Chang

The bimolecular gas-phase reaction of ground-state atomic silicon (Si; 3P) with disilane (Si2H6; 1A1g) was explored under single-collision conditions in a crossed molecular beam machine at a collision energy of 21 kJ mol-1. Combined with electronic structure calculations, the results suggest the formation of Si3H4 isomer(s) along with molecular hydrogen via indirect scattering dynamics through Si3H6 collision complex(es) and intersystem crossing from the triplet to the singlet surface. The nonadiabatic reaction dynamics can synthesize the energetically accessible singlet Si3H4 isomers in overall exoergic reaction(s) (-93 ± 21 kJ mol-1). All reasonable reaction products are either cyclic or hydrogen-bridged suggesting extensive isomerization processes from the reactants via the initially formed collision complex(es) to the fragmenting singlet intermediate(s). The underlying chemical dynamics of the silicon-disilane reaction are quite distinct from the isovalent carbon-ethane system that does not depict any reactivity at all, and open the door for an unconventional gas phase synthesis of hitherto elusive organosilicon molecules under single-collision conditions.


Chemical Physics Letters | 2016

Untangling the reaction dynamics of the silylidyne radical (SiH; X2Π) with acetylene (C2H2; X1Σg+)

Tao Yang; Beni B. Dangi; Aaron M. Thomas; Ralf I. Kaiser


Angewandte Chemie | 2017

Gas-Phase Synthesis of the Elusive Cyclooctatetraenyl Radical (C8H7) via Triplet Aromatic Cyclooctatetraene (C8H8) and Non-Aromatic Cyclooctatriene (C8H8) Intermediates

Michael Lucas; Aaron M. Thomas; Long Zhao; Ralf I. Kaiser; Gap-Sue Kim; Alexander M. Mebel


Journal of Physical Chemistry Letters | 2016

Oxidation of the para-Tolyl Radical by Molecular Oxygen under Single-Collison Conditions: Formation of the para-Toloxy Radical

Aaron M. Thomas; Tao Yang; Beni B. Dangi; Ralf I. Kaiser; Gap-Sue Kim; Alexander M. Mebel

Collaboration


Dive into the Aaron M. Thomas's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Ralf I. Kaiser

University of Hawaii at Manoa

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Alexander M. Mebel

Florida International University

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Tao Yang

University of Hawaii at Manoa

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Michael Lucas

University of California

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Long Zhao

University of Hawaii at Manoa

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Agnes H. H. Chang

National Dong Hwa University

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Bing-Jian Sun

National Dong Hwa University

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Daniel Belisario-Lara

Florida International University

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Diptarka Hait

University of California

View shared research outputs
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge