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Dive into the research topics where Leonid Sheps is active.

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Featured researches published by Leonid Sheps.


Angewandte Chemie | 2014

Rate Coefficients of C1 and C2 Criegee Intermediate Reactions with Formic and Acetic Acid Near the Collision Limit: Direct Kinetics Measurements and Atmospheric Implications

Oliver Welz; Arkke J. Eskola; Leonid Sheps; Brandon Rotavera; John D. Savee; Adam M. Scheer; David L. Osborn; Douglas Lowe; A. Murray Booth; Ping Xiao; M. Anwar H. Khan; Carl J. Percival; Dudley E. Shallcross; Craig A. Taatjes

Rate coefficients are directly determined for the reactions of the Criegee intermediates (CI) CH2OO and CH3CHOO with the two simplest carboxylic acids, formic acid (HCOOH) and acetic acid (CH3COOH), employing two complementary techniques: multiplexed photoionization mass spectrometry and cavity-enhanced broadband ultraviolet absorption spectroscopy. The measured rate coefficients are in excess of 1×10−10 cm3 s−1, several orders of magnitude larger than those suggested from many previous alkene ozonolysis experiments and assumed in atmospheric modeling studies. These results suggest that the reaction with carboxylic acids is a substantially more important loss process for CIs than is presently assumed. Implementing these rate coefficients in global atmospheric models shows that reactions between CI and organic acids make a substantial contribution to removal of these acids in terrestrial equatorial areas and in other regions where high CI concentrations occur such as high northern latitudes, and implies that sources of acids in these areas are larger than previously recognized.


Science | 2015

Direct observation and kinetics of a hydroperoxyalkyl radical (QOOH)

John D. Savee; Ewa Papajak; Brandon Rotavera; Haifeng Huang; Arkke J. Eskola; Oliver Welz; Leonid Sheps; Craig A. Taatjes; Judit Zádor; David L. Osborn

Catching a glimpse of the elusive QOOH Its straightforward to write down the net combustion reaction: Oxygen reacts with hydrocarbons to form water and carbon dioxide. The details of how all the bonds break and form in succession are a great deal more complicated. Savee et al. now report direct detection of a long-postulated piece of the puzzle, a so-called QOOH intermediate. This structure results from bound oxygen stripping a hydrogen atom from carbon, leaving a carbon-centered radical behind. The study explores the influence of the hydrocarbons unsaturation on the stability of QOOH, which has implications for both combustion and tropospheric oxidation chemistry. Science, this issue p. 643 A long-sought reactive intermediate in hydrocarbon oxidation is observed via mass spectrometry. Oxidation of organic compounds in combustion and in Earth’s troposphere is mediated by reactive species formed by the addition of molecular oxygen (O2) to organic radicals. Among the most crucial and elusive of these intermediates are hydroperoxyalkyl radicals, often denoted “QOOH.” These species and their reactions with O2 are responsible for the radical chain branching that sustains autoignition and are implicated in tropospheric autoxidation that can form low-volatility, highly oxygenated organic aerosol precursors. We report direct observation and kinetics measurements of a QOOH intermediate in the oxidation of 1,3-cycloheptadiene, a molecule that offers insight into both resonance-stabilized and nonstabilized radical intermediates. The results establish that resonance stabilization dramatically changes QOOH reactivity and, hence, that oxidation of unsaturated organics can produce exceptionally long-lived QOOH intermediates.


Journal of Chemical Physics | 2002

Relaxation of the C–H stretching fundamental vibrations of CHI3, CH2I2, and CH3I in solution

Max M. Heckscher; Leonid Sheps; Dieter Bingemann; F. Fleming Crim

Transient electronic absorption spectroscopy monitors the population of intermediate states in the vibrational energy relaxation of the iodo-substituted methanes, CHI3, CH2I2, and CH3I in solution after excitation of the fundamental C–H stretching vibration. These experiments give times for both intra- and intermolecular energy flow for each molecule. The trend in intramolecular vibrational energy redistribution (IVR) times shows that the local vibrational state structure around the initially prepared states in each molecule, not the overall state density, controls IVR. A comparison of experiments in the solvents chloroform and acetone reveals the solvent role in IVR and shows a strong solvent effect on the intermolecular energy transfer.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2012

C-H bond strengths and acidities in aromatic systems: effects of nitrogen incorporation in mono-, di-, and triazines.

Scott W. Wren; Kristen M. Vogelhuber; John M. Garver; Shuji Kato; Leonid Sheps; Veronica M. Bierbaum; W. C. Lineberger

The negative ion chemistry of five azine molecules has been investigated using the combined experimental techniques of negative ion photoelectron spectroscopy to obtain electron affinities (EA) and tandem flowing afterglow-selected ion tube (FA-SIFT) mass spectrometry to obtain deprotonation enthalpies (Δ(acid)H(298)). The measured Δ(acid)H(298) for the most acidic site of each azine species is combined with the EA of the corresponding radical in a thermochemical cycle to determine the corresponding C-H bond dissociation energy (BDE). The site-specific C-H BDE values of pyridine, 1,2-diazine, 1,3-diazine, 1,4-diazine, and 1,3,5-triazine are 110.4 ± 2.0, 111.3 ± 0.7, 113.4 ± 0.7, 107.5 ± 0.4, and 107.8 ± 0.7 kcal mol(-1), respectively. The application of complementary experimental methods, along with quantum chemical calculations, to a series of nitrogen-substituted azines sheds light on the influence of nitrogen atom substitution on the strength of C-H bonds in six-membered rings.


Science | 2010

Solvent-Mediated Electron Hopping: Long-Range Charge Transfer in IBr−(CO2) Photodissociation

Leonid Sheps; Elisa M. Miller; Samantha Horvath; Matthew Thompson; Robert Parson; Anne B. McCoy; W. C. Lineberger

CO2 Lends a Hand Solvent plays a complex and multifaceted role in facilitating charge transfer events. One obstacle to understanding its influence is that solvent molecules are in constant motion; just teasing out their arrangement in space at the point in time when an electron hops from one substrate to another is often a great challenge. Sheps et al. (p. 220; published online 4 March) have studied a highly simplified prototype system, in which a single CO2 molecule coordinates, as a solvent might, to an IBr− ion in the gas phase. A combination of ultrafast photoelectron spectroscopy and theoretical simulations was applied that suggests that even this solitary interaction is sufficient to induce electron transfer from iodide to bromine during a dissociation reaction. Energy channeled through CO2-bending vibrations promoted formation of I(CO2) and Br−. The presence of an intervening carbondioxide molecule dramatically changes the electron transfer probability between two halogen atoms. Chemical bond breaking involves coupled electronic and nuclear dynamics that can take place on multiple electronic surfaces. Here we report a time-resolved experimental and theoretical investigation of nonadiabatic dynamics during photodissociation of a complex of iodine monobromide anion with carbon dioxide [IBr–(CO2)] on the second excited (A′) electronic state. Previous experimental work showed that the dissociation of bare IBr– yields only I– + Br products. However, in IBr–(CO2), time-resolved photoelectron spectroscopy reveals that a subset of the dissociating molecules undergoes an electron transfer from iodine to bromine 350 femtoseconds after the initial excitation. Ab initio calculations and molecular dynamics simulations elucidate the mechanism for this charge hop and highlight the crucial role of the carbon dioxide molecule. The charge transfer between two recoiling atoms, assisted by a single solvent-like molecule, provides a notable limiting case of solvent-driven electron transfer over a distance of 7 angstroms.


Journal of Physical Chemistry A | 2013

Low-Temperature Combustion Chemistry of n-Butanol: Principal Oxidation Pathways of Hydroxybutyl Radicals

Oliver Welz; Judit Zádor; John D. Savee; Leonid Sheps; David L. Osborn; Craig A. Taatjes

Reactions of hydroxybutyl radicals with O2 were investigated by a combination of quantum-chemical calculations and experimental measurements of product formation. In pulsed-photolytic Cl-initiated oxidation of n-butanol, the time-resolved and isomer-specific product concentrations were probed using multiplexed tunable synchrotron photoionization mass spectrometry (MPIMS). The interpretation of the experimental data is underpinned by potential energy surfaces for the reactions of O2 with the four hydroxybutyl isomers (1-hydroxybut-1-yl, 1-hydroxybut-2-yl, 4-hydroxybut-2-yl, and 4-hydroxybut-1-yl) calculated at the CBS-QB3 and RQCISD(T)/cc-pV∞Z//B3LYP/6-311++G(d,p) levels of theory. The observed product yields display substantial temperature dependence, arising from a competition among three fundamental pathways: (1) stabilization of hydroxybutylperoxy radicals, (2) bimolecular product formation in the hydroxybutyl + O2 reactions, and (3) decomposition of hydroxybutyl radicals. The 1-hydroxybut-1-yl + O2 reaction is dominated by direct HO2 elimination from the corresponding peroxy radical forming butanal as the stable coproduct. The chemistry of the other three hydroxybutylperoxy radical isomers mainly proceeds via alcohol-specific internal H-atom abstractions involving the H atom from either the -OH group or from the carbon attached to the -OH group. We observe evidence of the recently reported water elimination pathway (Welz et al. J. Phys. Chem. Lett. 2013, 4 (3), 350-354) from the 4-hydroxybut-2-yl + O2 reaction, supporting its importance in γ-hydroxyalkyl + O2 reactions. Experiments using the 1,1-d2 and 4,4,4-d3 isotopologues of n-butanol suggest the presence of yet unexplored pathways to acetaldehyde.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2014

Electronic states of the quasilinear molecule propargylene (HCCCH) from negative ion photoelectron spectroscopy

David L. Osborn; Kristen M. Vogelhuber; Scott W. Wren; Elisa M. Miller; Yu-Ju Lu; Amanda S. Case; Leonid Sheps; Robert J. McMahon; John F. Stanton; Lawrence B. Harding; Branko Ruscic; W. C. Lineberger

We use gas-phase negative ion photoelectron spectroscopy to study the quasilinear carbene propargylene, HCCCH, and its isotopologue DCCCD. Photodetachment from HCCCH– affords the X̃(3B) ground state of HCCCH and its ã(1A), b̃ (1B), d̃(1A2), and B̃(3A2) excited states. Extended, negatively anharmonic vibrational progressions in the X̃(3B) ground state and the open-shell singlet b̃ (1B) state arise from the change in geometry between the anion and the neutral states and complicate the assignment of the origin peak. The geometry change arising from electron photodetachment results in excitation of the ν4 symmetric CCH bending mode, with a measured fundamental frequency of 363 ± 57 cm(–1) in the X̃(3B) state. Our calculated harmonic frequency for this mode is 359 cm(–1). The Franck–Condon envelope of this progression cannot be reproduced within the harmonic approximation. The spectra of the ã(1A), d̃(1A2), and B̃(3A2) states are each characterized by a short vibrational progression and a prominent origin peak, establishing that the geometries of the anion and these neutral states are similar. Through comparison of the HCCCH– and DCCCD– photoelectron spectra, we measure the electron affinity of HCCCH to be 1.156 ± (0.095)(0.010) eV, with a singlet–triplet splitting between the X̃(3B) and the ã(1A) states of ΔEST = 0.500 ± (0.01)(0.10) eV (11.5 ± (0.2)(2.3) kcal/mol). Experimental term energies of the higher excited states are T0 [b̃(1B)] = 0.94 ± (0.20)(0.22) eV, T0 [d̃(1A2)] = 3.30 ± (0.02)(0.10) eV, T0 [B̃(3A2)] = 3.58 ± (0.02)(0.10) eV. The photoelectron angular distributions show significant π character in all the frontier molecular orbitals, with additional σ character in orbitals that create the X̃(3B) and b̃(1B) states upon electron detachment. These results are consistent with a quasilinear, nonplanar, doubly allylic structure of X̃(3B) HCCCH with both diradical and carbene character.


Journal of Physical Chemistry A | 2015

New Insights into Low-Temperature Oxidation of Propane from Synchrotron Photoionization Mass Spectrometry and Multiscale Informatics Modeling

Oliver Welz; Michael P. Burke; Ivan O. Antonov; C. Franklin Goldsmith; John D. Savee; David L. Osborn; Craig A. Taatjes; Stephen J. Klippenstein; Leonid Sheps

Low-temperature propane oxidation was studied at P = 4 Torr and T = 530, 600, and 670 K by time-resolved multiplexed photoionization mass spectrometry (MPIMS), which probes the reactants, intermediates, and products with isomeric selectivity using tunable synchrotron vacuum UV ionizing radiation. The oxidation is initiated by pulsed laser photolysis of oxalyl chloride, (COCl)2, at 248 nm, which rapidly generates a ∼1:1 mixture of 1-propyl (n-propyl) and 2-propyl (i-propyl) radicals via the fast Cl + propane reaction. At all three temperatures, the major stable product species is propene, formed in the propyl + O2 reactions by direct HO2 elimination from both n- and i-propyl peroxy radicals. The experimentally derived propene yields relative to the initial concentration of Cl atoms are (20 ± 4)% at 530 K, (55 ± 11)% at 600 K, and (86 ± 17)% at 670 K at a reaction time of 20 ms. The lower yield of propene at low temperature reflects substantial formation of propyl peroxy radicals, which do not completely decompose on the experimental time scale. In addition, C3H6O isomers methyloxirane, oxetane, acetone, and propanal are detected as minor products. Our measured yields of oxetane and methyloxirane, which are coproducts of OH radicals, suggest a revision of the OH formation pathways in models of low-temperature propane oxidation. The experimental results are modeled and interpreted using a multiscale informatics approach, presented in detail in a separate publication (Burke, M. P.; Goldsmith, C. F.; Klippenstein, S. J.; Welz, O.; Huang H.; Antonov I. O.; Savee J. D.; Osborn D. L.; Zádor, J.; Taatjes, C. A.; Sheps, L. Multiscale Informatics for Low-Temperature Propane Oxidation: Further Complexities in Studies of Complex Reactions. J. Phys. Chem A. 2015, DOI: 10.1021/acs.jpca.5b01003). The model predicts the time profiles and yields of the experimentally observed primary products well, and shows satisfactory agreement for products formed mostly via secondary radical-radical reactions.


Environmental Science & Technology | 2017

The Reaction between CH3O2 and OH Radicals: Product Yields and Atmospheric Implications

Emmanuel Assaf; Leonid Sheps; L. K. Whalley; Dwayne E. Heard; Alexandre Tomas; Coralie Schoemaecker; Christa Fittschen

The reaction between CH3O2 and OH radicals has been shown to be fast and to play an appreciable role for the removal of CH3O2 radials in remote environments such as the marine boundary layer. Two different experimental techniques have been used here to determine the products of this reaction. The HO2 yield has been obtained from simultaneous time-resolved measurements of the absolute concentration of CH3O2, OH, and HO2 radicals by cw-CRDS. The possible formation of a Criegee intermediate has been measured by broadband cavity enhanced UV absorption. A yield of ϕHO2 = (0.8 ± 0.2) and an upper limit for ϕCriegee = 0.05 has been determined for this reaction, suggesting a minor yield of methanol or stabilized trioxide as a product. The impact of this reaction on the composition of the remote marine boundary layer has been determined by implementing these findings into a box model utilizing the Master Chemical Mechanism v3.2, and constraining the model for conditions found at the Cape Verde Atmospheric Observatory in the remote tropical Atlantic Ocean. Inclusion of the CH3O2+OH reaction into the model results in up to 30% decrease in the CH3O2 radical concentration while the HO2 concentration increased by up to 20%. Production and destruction of O3 are also influenced by these changes, and the model indicates that taking into account the reaction between CH3O2 and OH leads to a 6% decrease of O3.


Journal of Physical Chemistry A | 2016

Pressure-Dependent Competition among Reaction Pathways from First- and Second-O2 Additions in the Low-Temperature Oxidation of Tetrahydrofuran

Ivan O. Antonov; Judit Zádor; Brandon Rotavera; Ewa Papajak; David L. Osborn; Craig A. Taatjes; Leonid Sheps

We report a combined experimental and quantum chemistry study of the initial reactions in low-temperature oxidation of tetrahydrofuran (THF). Using synchrotron-based time-resolved VUV photoionization mass spectrometry, we probe numerous transient intermediates and products at P = 10-2000 Torr and T = 400-700 K. A key reaction sequence, revealed by our experiments, is the conversion of THF-yl peroxy to hydroperoxy-THF-yl radicals (QOOH), followed by a second O2 addition and subsequent decomposition to dihydrofuranyl hydroperoxide + HO2 or to γ-butyrolactone hydroperoxide + OH. The competition between these two pathways affects the degree of radical chain-branching and is likely of central importance in modeling the autoignition of THF. We interpret our data with the aid of quantum chemical calculations of the THF-yl + O2 and QOOH + O2 potential energy surfaces. On the basis of our results, we propose a simplified THF oxidation mechanism below 700 K, which involves the competition among unimolecular decomposition and oxidation pathways of QOOH.

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Craig A. Taatjes

Sandia National Laboratories

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David L. Osborn

Sandia National Laboratories

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John D. Savee

Sandia National Laboratories

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Oliver Welz

Sandia National Laboratories

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Arkke J. Eskola

Sandia National Laboratories

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Ivan O. Antonov

Sandia National Laboratories

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Judit Zádor

Sandia National Laboratories

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Adam M. Scheer

Sandia National Laboratories

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Kendrew Au

Sandia National Laboratories

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