Abstract
The radiation chemical yields of the main products produced in liquid pyridine radiolysis (molecular hydrogen and dipyridyl) have been examined as a function of particle linear energy transfer (LET) with protons, helium ions, and carbon ions of a few to 30 MeV and compared to gamma-radiolysis published in a previous work (J. Phys. Chem. A 2005, 109, 461). Anthracene and biphenyl scavenging techniques have been used to clarify the role of the triplet excited state. An increase in triplet scavenger concentration leads to a decrease in pyridine triplet excited state with a concurrent decrease in dipyridyl, but formation of the latter does not primarily involve pyridyl radicals expected to be produced in the decomposition of the triplet excited state. A decrease in the yield of dipyridyl and an increase in molecular hydrogen are observed with increasing track average LET. The dipyridyl yield with 10 MeV carbon ions is 0.20 molecules/100 eV, which is only 16% of that of observed with gamma-rays. The low yield of dipyridyl with carbon ions is attributed to intratrack triplet-triplet (T-T) annihilation processes due to the increase in local triplet excited-state concentrations with increasing LET. An increasing yield of molecular hydrogen with increasing LET is probably due to an increase in the formation and subsequent decay of singlet excited states produced by the T-T annihilation. A complete mechanism for the radiolysis of liquid pyridine is presented.
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