Gas mixtures of Cl2 (∼2 mm Hg) and O2 (∼50 mm Hg), when exposed to light in the near ultraviolet and then trapped at liquid N2 temperatures, yield a solid Cl2 matrix, which on warming to room temperature liberates small quantities of O2 in excess of that trapped mechanically in the absence of light. It is shown that this excess O2 can be reasonably accounted for in terms of the formation of ClO, Cl2O2, or ClOO. Under the experimental conditions the gas‐phase concentration of ClO and Cl are about equal, while Cl·OO/Cl is small. If the source of O2 is Cl·OO it must arise from reaction between Cl and O2 at the cold walls, the gas phase concentration of Cl·OO being negligible. Very small amounts of Cl2O and OClO may be formed in the present system, but these would not produce O2 on warming. Analysis of the flash photolysis experiments on Cl2–O2 mixtures indicates that measurable amounts of OClO would be formed unless there was a very rapid isomerization reaction,
The absence of Cl2O in the flash experiments can be shown to imply a very rapid reaction,
with an activation energy of less than 4 kcal.
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