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Tricarbon monoxide

Tricarbon monoxide C3O is a reactive radical oxocarbon molecule found in space, and which can be made as a transient substance in the laboratory. It can be trapped in an inert gas matrix or made as a short lived gas. C3O can be classified as a ketene or an oxocumulene a kind of heterocumulene.[3]

Tricarbon monoxide
Names
Preferred IUPAC name
3-Oxopropa-1,2-dien-1-ylidene
Other names
3-Oxopropadienylidene
Identifiers
3D model (JSmol)
  • Interactive image
  • 101860484
  • InChI=1S/C3O/c1-2-3-4
    Key: ZCNKODXATWVMAO-UHFFFAOYSA-N
  • [C-]#CC#[O+]
Properties
C3O
Molar mass 52.032 g·mol−1
Appearance Gas
Related compounds
Related oxides
carbon monoxide
dicarbon monoxide
tetracarbon monoxide
Related compounds
tricarbon monosulfide
carbon subnitride
HCCCO[2]
Except where otherwise noted, data are given for materials in their standard state (at 25 °C [77 °F], 100 kPa).

Natural occurrence edit

C3O has been detected by its microwave spectrum in the dark cold Taurus Molecular Cloud One[4] and also in the protostar Elias 18.[5]

The route to produce this is speculated to be:[6]

HC+
3
+ CO2 → HC3O+ + CO
HC3O+ → C3O + H+

or[5]

C2 + CO → C3O which is more favourable at lower temperatures.

The related C3S is more abundant in dark molecular clouds, even though oxygen is 20 times more common than sulfur. The difference is due to the higher rate of formation and that C3S is less polar.[5]

Production edit

C3O can be produced by heating Meldrum's acid. This also produces acetone, carbon monoxide and carbon dioxide.[7]

R. L. DeKock and W. Waltner were the first to identify C3O by reacting atomic carbon with carbon monoxide in an argon matrix. They observed an infrared absorption line at 2241 cm−1.[7] They produced carbon atoms by heating graphite inside a thin tantalum tube.[8]

M. E. Jacox photolysed C3O2 in an argon matrix to produce C3O with an IR absorption line at 2244 cm−1, however he did not recognise what was produced.[8]

By heating diazocyclopentanetrione or a similar acid anhydride, (2,4-azo-3-oxo-dipentanoic anhydride), C3O is produced. Also the action of light on tetracarbon dioxide yields C3O and CO.[9]

Heating fumaryl chloride also yields C3O.[3] Heating Lead 2,4-dinitroresorcinate also produces C3O along with C2O, CO and carbon suboxide.[10] An electric discharge in carbon suboxide produces about 11 ppm C3O.[11]

Roger Brown heated 3,5-dimethyl-1-propynolpyrazole to over 700 °C to make C3O.[12] Also pyrolysis of 5,5'-bis(2,2-dimethyl-4,6-dioxo-1,3-dioxanylidene or di-isopropylidene ethylenetetracarboxylate yields C3O.[12]

Irradiating carbon monoxide ice with electrons yields a mixture of carbon oxides, including C3O. This process could happen on icy bodies in space.[13]

Reactions edit

C3O can be stabilised as a ligand in the pentacarbonyls of group 6 elements as in Cr(CO)5CCCO. This is formed from [n-Bu4N][CrI(CO)5] and the silver acetylide derivative of sodium propiolate (AgC≡CCOONa), and then thiophosgene. AgC≡CCOONa in turn is made from silver ions and sodium propiolate.[14] The blue black solid complex is called pentacarbony1(3-oxopropadienylidene)chromium(0). It is quite volatile and decomposes at 32 °C. Its infrared spectrum shows a band at 2028 cm−1 due to CCCO. The complex can dissolve in hexane, however it slowly decomposes, losing dicarbon (C2) which goes on to form acetylenes and cumulenes in the solvent. Dimethyl sulfoxide oxidises the CCCO ligand to carbon suboxide./[15]

C3O deposits a reddish-black film on glass.[12]

The reaction of C3O and urea is predicted to form uracil.[16] The pathway for this, is that firstly the two molecules react to form isocyanuric acid and propiolamide, the NH then reacts to bond with the triple bond, with the NH2 group moving back. Then a final cyclisation occurs to make uracil.[17]

Properties edit

The C3O molecules do not last long. At the low pressure of 1 pascal, they survive about one second.[18] The force constants for the bonds are: C1-O 14.94, C1-C2 1.39 C2-C3 6.02 mdyn/Å.[8] The bond lengths are C-O 1.149, C1-C2 1.300, C2-C3 1.273 Å. The molecule is linear.[6]

bond atom 1 atom 2 length
Å[6]
force constant
mdyn/Å[8]
IR bands
cm−1
CCC-O C1 O 1.149 14.94
CC-CO C2 C1 1.300 1.39
C-CCCO C3 C2 1.273 6.02

Proton affinity is 885 kJmol−1.[6] The dipole moment is 2.391 D.[14] The oxygen end has a positive charge, and the carbon end the negative charge.[6] The molecule behaves as if there are triple bonds at each end, and a single bond in the middle. This is isoelectronic to cyanogen.[19]

Molecular constants used in determining the microwave spectrum are rotational constant B0=4810.8862 MHz centrifugal distortion constant D0=0.00077 MHz. Known microwave spectral lines vary from 9621.76 for J=1←0 to 182792.35 MHz for J=19←18.[11]

References edit

  1. ^ Brown, Ronald D.; Rice, E. H. (October 1984). "Tricarbon monoxide – a theoretical study". Journal of the American Chemical Society. 106 (22): 6475–6478. doi:10.1021/ja00334a002.
  2. ^ Cooksy, A. L.; Watson, J. K. G.; Gottlieb, C. A.; Thaddeus, P. (February 1992). "The rotational spectrum of the carbon chain radical HCCCO". The Astrophysical Journal. 386: L27. Bibcode:1992ApJ...386L..27C. doi:10.1086/186284.
  3. ^ a b Ruppel, Raimund (1999). "Neue Heterokumulene und Carbene" (PDF) (in German). Gießen: Justus-Liebig-Universität: 13. Retrieved 10 November 2016. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  4. ^ Matthews, H. E.; Irvine, W. M.; Friberg, P; Brown, R. D.; Godfrey, P. D. (12 July 1984). "A new interstellar molecule: tricarbon monoxide". Nature. 310 (5973): 125–126. Bibcode:1984Natur.310..125M. doi:10.1038/310125a0. PMID 11541993. S2CID 4335136.
  5. ^ a b c Abbas, Haider (6 February 2014). "Neutral-neutral reactions for the formation of C3O and C3S". Astrophysics and Space Science. 351 (1): 53–57. Bibcode:2014Ap&SS.351...53A. doi:10.1007/s10509-014-1809-y. S2CID 124813337.
  6. ^ a b c d e Botschwina, Peter (1989). "A theoretical investigation of the astrophysically important molecules C3O and HC3O+". The Journal of Chemical Physics. 90 (8): 4301–4313. Bibcode:1989JChPh..90.4301B. doi:10.1063/1.455787.
  7. ^ a b Brown, Ronald D.; Eastwood, Frank W.; Elmes, Patricia S.; Godfrey, Peter D. (October 1983). "Tricarbon monoxide". Journal of the American Chemical Society. 105 (21): 6496–6497. doi:10.1021/ja00359a026. image of the tricarbon monoxide research team
  8. ^ a b c d DeKock, R. L.; Weltner, W. (December 1971). "C2O, CN2, and C3O molecules". Journal of the American Chemical Society. 93 (25): 7106–7107. doi:10.1021/ja00754a081.
  9. ^ Maier, Günther; Reisenauer, Hans Peter; Balli, Heinz; Brandt, Willy; Janoschek, Rudolf (August 1990). "C4O2(1,2,3-Butatriene-1,4-dione), the First Dioxide of Carbon with an Even Number of C Atoms". Angewandte Chemie International Edition in English. 29 (8): 905–908. doi:10.1002/anie.199009051.
  10. ^ Tang T.B. (1 February 1985). "Tricarbon monoxide and dicarbon monoxide: Addendum to "decomposition of lead (ii) 2,4-dinitroresorcinate"". Thermochimica Acta. 83 (2): 397–398. doi:10.1016/0040-6031(85)87024-6.
  11. ^ a b Tang, Tong B.; Inokuchi, Hiroo; Saito, Shuji; Yamada, Chikashi; Hirota, Eizi (April 1985). "CCCO: Generation by dc glow discharge in carbon suboxide, and microwave spectrum". Chemical Physics Letters. 116 (1): 83–85. Bibcode:1985CPL...116...83T. doi:10.1016/0009-2614(85)80130-5.
  12. ^ a b c Brown, Roger F.C.; Godfrey, Peter D.; Lee, Swee Choo (1985). "Flash vacuum pyrolysis of 1-propynoylpyrazoles: a new precursor of tricarbon monoxide". Tetrahedron Letters. 26 (51): 6373–6376. doi:10.1016/S0040-4039(01)84602-5.
  13. ^ Jamieson, Corey S.; Mebel, Alexander M.; Kaiser, Ralf I. (March 2006). "Understanding the Kinetics and Dynamics of Radiation‐induced Reaction Pathways in Carbon Monoxide Ice at 10 K". The Astrophysical Journal Supplement Series. 163 (1): 184–206. Bibcode:2006ApJS..163..184J. CiteSeerX 10.1.1.515.8473. doi:10.1086/499245.
  14. ^ a b Baceiredo, Antoine (2010). Transition Metal Complexes of Neutral Eta1-Carbon Ligands. Springer Science & Business Media. pp. 247–248. ISBN 978-3642047213.
  15. ^ Berke, Heinz; Härter, Peter (March 1980). "Complex Stabilization of 3-Oxopropadienylidene(C3O) with Pentacarbonylchromium(0)". Angewandte Chemie International Edition in English. 19 (3): 225–226. doi:10.1002/anie.198002251.
  16. ^ Wang, Tianfang; Bowie, John H. (November 2011). "Studies of cyclization reactions of linear cumulenes and heterocumulenes using the neutralization-reionization procedure and/or ab initio calculations". Mass Spectrometry Reviews. 30 (6): 1225–1241. Bibcode:2011MSRv...30.1225W. doi:10.1002/mas.20328. PMID 21400561.
  17. ^ Wang, Tianfang; Bowie, John H. (2012). "Can cytosine, thymine and uracil be formed in interstellar regions? A theoretical study". Org. Biomol. Chem. 10 (3): 652–662. doi:10.1039/C1OB06352A. PMID 22120518.
  18. ^ Information, Reed Business (9 May 1985). "Theory predicts a new oxide of carbon". New Scientist (1455): 21. Retrieved 10 November 2016. {{cite journal}}: |first1= has generic name (help)
  19. ^ Brown, Ronald D.; Pullin, David E.; Rice, Edward H. N.; Rodler, Martin (December 1985). "The infrared spectrum and force field of tricarbon monoxide". Journal of the American Chemical Society. 107 (26): 7877–7880. doi:10.1021/ja00312a013.

tricarbon, monoxide, redirects, here, type, meteorite, chondrite, reactive, radical, oxocarbon, molecule, found, space, which, made, transient, substance, laboratory, trapped, inert, matrix, made, short, lived, classified, ketene, oxocumulene, kind, heterocumu. C3O redirects here For the C3O type of meteorite see CM chondrite Tricarbon monoxide C3O is a reactive radical oxocarbon molecule found in space and which can be made as a transient substance in the laboratory It can be trapped in an inert gas matrix or made as a short lived gas C3O can be classified as a ketene or an oxocumulene a kind of heterocumulene 3 Tricarbon monoxide NamesPreferred IUPAC name 3 Oxopropa 1 2 dien 1 ylideneOther names 3 OxopropadienylideneIdentifiersCAS Number 11127 17 6 1 3D model JSmol Interactive imagePubChem CID 101860484InChI InChI 1S C3O c1 2 3 4Key ZCNKODXATWVMAO UHFFFAOYSA NSMILES C CC O PropertiesChemical formula C 3OMolar mass 52 032 g mol 1Appearance GasRelated compoundsRelated oxides carbon monoxidedicarbon monoxidetetracarbon monoxideRelated compounds tricarbon monosulfidecarbon subnitrideHCCCO 2 Except where otherwise noted data are given for materials in their standard state at 25 C 77 F 100 kPa Infobox references Contents 1 Natural occurrence 2 Production 3 Reactions 4 Properties 5 ReferencesNatural occurrence editC3O has been detected by its microwave spectrum in the dark cold Taurus Molecular Cloud One 4 and also in the protostar Elias 18 5 The route to produce this is speculated to be 6 HC 3 CO2 HC3O CO HC3O C3O H or 5 C2 CO C3O which is more favourable at lower temperatures The related C3S is more abundant in dark molecular clouds even though oxygen is 20 times more common than sulfur The difference is due to the higher rate of formation and that C3S is less polar 5 Production editC3O can be produced by heating Meldrum s acid This also produces acetone carbon monoxide and carbon dioxide 7 R L DeKock and W Waltner were the first to identify C3O by reacting atomic carbon with carbon monoxide in an argon matrix They observed an infrared absorption line at 2241 cm 1 7 They produced carbon atoms by heating graphite inside a thin tantalum tube 8 M E Jacox photolysed C3O2 in an argon matrix to produce C3O with an IR absorption line at 2244 cm 1 however he did not recognise what was produced 8 By heating diazocyclopentanetrione or a similar acid anhydride 2 4 azo 3 oxo dipentanoic anhydride C3O is produced Also the action of light on tetracarbon dioxide yields C3O and CO 9 Heating fumaryl chloride also yields C3O 3 Heating Lead 2 4 dinitroresorcinate also produces C3O along with C2O CO and carbon suboxide 10 An electric discharge in carbon suboxide produces about 11 ppm C3O 11 Roger Brown heated 3 5 dimethyl 1 propynolpyrazole to over 700 C to make C3O 12 Also pyrolysis of 5 5 bis 2 2 dimethyl 4 6 dioxo 1 3 dioxanylidene or di isopropylidene ethylenetetracarboxylate yields C3O 12 Irradiating carbon monoxide ice with electrons yields a mixture of carbon oxides including C3O This process could happen on icy bodies in space 13 Reactions editC3O can be stabilised as a ligand in the pentacarbonyls of group 6 elements as in Cr CO 5CCCO This is formed from n Bu4N CrI CO 5 and the silver acetylide derivative of sodium propiolate AgC CCOONa and then thiophosgene AgC CCOONa in turn is made from silver ions and sodium propiolate 14 The blue black solid complex is called pentacarbony1 3 oxopropadienylidene chromium 0 It is quite volatile and decomposes at 32 C Its infrared spectrum shows a band at 2028 cm 1 due to CCCO The complex can dissolve in hexane however it slowly decomposes losing dicarbon C2 which goes on to form acetylenes and cumulenes in the solvent Dimethyl sulfoxide oxidises the CCCO ligand to carbon suboxide 15 C3O deposits a reddish black film on glass 12 The reaction of C3O and urea is predicted to form uracil 16 The pathway for this is that firstly the two molecules react to form isocyanuric acid and propiolamide the NH then reacts to bond with the triple bond with the NH2 group moving back Then a final cyclisation occurs to make uracil 17 Properties editThe C3O molecules do not last long At the low pressure of 1 pascal they survive about one second 18 The force constants for the bonds are C1 O 14 94 C1 C2 1 39 C2 C3 6 02 mdyn A 8 The bond lengths are C O 1 149 C1 C2 1 300 C2 C3 1 273 A The molecule is linear 6 bond atom 1 atom 2 lengthA 6 force constantmdyn A 8 IR bandscm 1CCC O C1 O 1 149 14 94CC CO C2 C1 1 300 1 39C CCCO C3 C2 1 273 6 02Proton affinity is 885 kJmol 1 6 The dipole moment is 2 391 D 14 The oxygen end has a positive charge and the carbon end the negative charge 6 The molecule behaves as if there are triple bonds at each end and a single bond in the middle This is isoelectronic to cyanogen 19 Molecular constants used in determining the microwave spectrum are rotational constant B0 4810 8862 MHz centrifugal distortion constant D0 0 00077 MHz Known microwave spectral lines vary from 9621 76 for J 1 0 to 182792 35 MHz for J 19 18 11 References edit Brown Ronald D Rice E H October 1984 Tricarbon monoxide a theoretical study Journal of the American Chemical Society 106 22 6475 6478 doi 10 1021 ja00334a002 Cooksy A L Watson J K G Gottlieb C A Thaddeus P February 1992 The rotational spectrum of the carbon chain radical HCCCO The Astrophysical Journal 386 L27 Bibcode 1992ApJ 386L 27C doi 10 1086 186284 a b Ruppel Raimund 1999 Neue Heterokumulene und Carbene PDF in German Giessen Justus Liebig Universitat 13 Retrieved 10 November 2016 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Matthews H E Irvine W M Friberg P Brown R D Godfrey P D 12 July 1984 A new interstellar molecule tricarbon monoxide Nature 310 5973 125 126 Bibcode 1984Natur 310 125M doi 10 1038 310125a0 PMID 11541993 S2CID 4335136 a b c Abbas Haider 6 February 2014 Neutral neutral reactions for the formation of C3O and C3S Astrophysics and Space Science 351 1 53 57 Bibcode 2014Ap amp SS 351 53A doi 10 1007 s10509 014 1809 y S2CID 124813337 a b c d e Botschwina Peter 1989 A theoretical investigation of the astrophysically important molecules C3O and HC3O The Journal of Chemical Physics 90 8 4301 4313 Bibcode 1989JChPh 90 4301B doi 10 1063 1 455787 a b Brown Ronald D Eastwood Frank W Elmes Patricia S Godfrey Peter D October 1983 Tricarbon monoxide Journal of the American Chemical Society 105 21 6496 6497 doi 10 1021 ja00359a026 image of the tricarbon monoxide research team a b c d DeKock R L Weltner W December 1971 C2O CN2 and C3O molecules Journal of the American Chemical Society 93 25 7106 7107 doi 10 1021 ja00754a081 Maier Gunther Reisenauer Hans Peter Balli Heinz Brandt Willy Janoschek Rudolf August 1990 C4O2 1 2 3 Butatriene 1 4 dione the First Dioxide of Carbon with an Even Number of C Atoms Angewandte Chemie International Edition in English 29 8 905 908 doi 10 1002 anie 199009051 Tang T B 1 February 1985 Tricarbon monoxide and dicarbon monoxide Addendum to decomposition of lead ii 2 4 dinitroresorcinate Thermochimica Acta 83 2 397 398 doi 10 1016 0040 6031 85 87024 6 a b Tang Tong B Inokuchi Hiroo Saito Shuji Yamada Chikashi Hirota Eizi April 1985 CCCO Generation by dc glow discharge in carbon suboxide and microwave spectrum Chemical Physics Letters 116 1 83 85 Bibcode 1985CPL 116 83T doi 10 1016 0009 2614 85 80130 5 a b c Brown Roger F C Godfrey Peter D Lee Swee Choo 1985 Flash vacuum pyrolysis of 1 propynoylpyrazoles a new precursor of tricarbon monoxide Tetrahedron Letters 26 51 6373 6376 doi 10 1016 S0040 4039 01 84602 5 Jamieson Corey S Mebel Alexander M Kaiser Ralf I March 2006 Understanding the Kinetics and Dynamics of Radiation induced Reaction Pathways in Carbon Monoxide Ice at 10 K The Astrophysical Journal Supplement Series 163 1 184 206 Bibcode 2006ApJS 163 184J CiteSeerX 10 1 1 515 8473 doi 10 1086 499245 a b Baceiredo Antoine 2010 Transition Metal Complexes of Neutral Eta1 Carbon Ligands Springer Science amp Business Media pp 247 248 ISBN 978 3642047213 Berke Heinz Harter Peter March 1980 Complex Stabilization of 3 Oxopropadienylidene C3O with Pentacarbonylchromium 0 Angewandte Chemie International Edition in English 19 3 225 226 doi 10 1002 anie 198002251 Wang Tianfang Bowie John H November 2011 Studies of cyclization reactions of linear cumulenes and heterocumulenes using the neutralization reionization procedure and or ab initio calculations Mass Spectrometry Reviews 30 6 1225 1241 Bibcode 2011MSRv 30 1225W doi 10 1002 mas 20328 PMID 21400561 Wang Tianfang Bowie John H 2012 Can cytosine thymine and uracil be formed in interstellar regions A theoretical study Org Biomol Chem 10 3 652 662 doi 10 1039 C1OB06352A PMID 22120518 Information Reed Business 9 May 1985 Theory predicts a new oxide of carbon New Scientist 1455 21 Retrieved 10 November 2016 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a first1 has generic name help Brown Ronald D Pullin David E Rice Edward H N Rodler Martin December 1985 The infrared spectrum and force field of tricarbon monoxide Journal of the American Chemical Society 107 26 7877 7880 doi 10 1021 ja00312a013 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Tricarbon monoxide amp oldid 1169995486, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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