INFRARED STUDY OF THE HYDROGEN-BOUNDED, HIGH-BOILING ORGANIC COMPOUNDS ISOLATED IN THE LOW TEMPERATURE INERT GAS MATRIX.

Loading...
Thumbnail Image

Date

1969

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Ohio State University

Research Projects

Organizational Units

Journal Issue

Abstract

The low temperature matrix isolation technique has been used by infrared spectroscopists for more than ten years in the study of low-boiling compounds, unstable molecular species and very high-boiling inorganic compounds. However, little information can be found in the literature about the matrix isolation of the strongly hydrogen-bonded solid organic compounds for analytical studies. This paper reports a matrix isolation device which can be used to isolate the monomer of the hydrogen-bonded organic compounds, liquids or solids at room temperature, in a low temperature inert gas matrix. The isolation can be achieved in a reasonably short time and this device can be used repeatedly for different samples in routine analysis. Infrared spectra of the matrix isolated pyrazole, imidazole, pyridinols and some other hydrogen-bonded compounds will be discussed.

Description

Author Institution: Chemical Physics Research Laboratory, The Dow Chemical Company

Keywords

Citation