Q.7 The major product(s) produced by gas phase UV irradiation of 2-pentanone is (are) (A) acetone and ethene (B) acetic acid and propionic acid (C) 2-pentanol (D) cyclopentane

Q.7 The major product(s) produced by gas phase UV irradiation of 2-pentanone is (are)
(A) acetone and ethene
(B) acetic acid and propionic acid
(C) 2-pentanol
(D) cyclopentane

The major product(s) from gas phase UV irradiation of 2-pentanone are acetone and ethene, produced via the dominant Norrish Type II reaction pathway.

Mechanism Overview

2-Pentanone (CH₃COCH₂CH₂CH₃) absorbs UV light (n→π* transition), exciting the carbonyl group, primarily to the triplet state in gas phase. The Norrish Type II process involves intramolecular γ-hydrogen abstraction by the excited oxygen, forming a 1,4-biradical that cleaves the Cβ-Cγ bond, yielding acetone (CH₃COCH₃) and ethene (CH₂=CH₂) as major fragments in ~54-62% and ~61% yields, respectively. Norrish Type I (α-cleavage) competes but is minor (~12-38% branching), producing CH₃CO- and – CH₂CH₂CH₃ radicals that disproportionate or recombine without matching options directly.

Option Analysis

  • (A) Acetone and ethene: Correct, as these directly form from Norrish Type II cleavage (88% combined yield in some reports), confirmed in tropospheric simulations at 311 nm UV.

  • (B) Acetic acid and propionic acid: Incorrect; these are photooxidation products (with OH/O₂) under atmospheric conditions, not primary photolysis products in pure gas phase UV irradiation.

  • (C) 2-Pentanol: Incorrect; this requires H-atom addition or reduction, absent in gas phase photolysis without H₂ or sensitizers.

  • (D) Cyclopentane: Incorrect; no ring closure to cyclopentane occurs—minor cyclic products like 1-methylcyclobutanol (~12%) arise from biradical cyclization, but not this hydrocarbon.

Introduction to Gas Phase UV Irradiation of 2-Pentanone

Gas phase UV irradiation of 2-pentanone triggers key photochemical reactions like Norrish Type I and II, producing acetone and ethene as major products. This process is vital for understanding atmospheric chemistry and ketone photolysis in exams like CSIR NET Life Sciences.

Photochemical Mechanism Breakdown

Upon UV absorption (240-360 nm), 2-pentanone (CH₃COCH₂CH₂CH₃) undergoes triplet excitation. Norrish Type II dominates in gas phase: γ-H abstraction forms a biradical, cleaving to CH₃COCH₃ + CH₂=CH₂ (yields ~54-88%).

  • Type I α-cleavage yields radicals (minor).

  • No oxidation without O₂/OH.

Why Acetone and Ethene Are Major Products

Experimental yields confirm: acetone (54±2.7%), ethene (61.7±3.4%) from photodissociation. This matches option (A) for MCQs on gas phase UV irradiation of 2-pentanone.

Exam-Relevant Option Elimination

Option Products Validity Reason
(A) Acetone + ethene Correct  Norrish II pathway.
(B) Acetic + propionic acid Incorrect  Requires oxidation.
(C) 2-Pentanol Incorrect  No reduction step.
(D) Cyclopentane Incorrect  Wrong cyclic product.

Atmospheric and Exam Implications

In troposphere, these products contribute to SOA/acidity; for CSIR NET, focus on Norrish II for acyclic ketones with γ-H.

2 Comments
  • Kirti Agarwal
    December 25, 2025

    Acetone and ethene

  • Sonal Nagar
    December 27, 2025

    acetone and ethene

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