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Creators/Authors contains: "Esposito, Vincent"

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  1. Free, publicly-accessible full text available July 24, 2026
  2. Criegee intermediates (CIs) are of great significance to Earth’s troposphere – implicated in altering the tropospheric oxidation cycle and in forming low volatility products that typically condense to form secondary organic aerosols (SOAs). As such, their chemistry has attracted vast attention in recent years. In particular, the unimolecular decay of thermal and vibrationally-excited CIs has been the focus of several experimental and computational studies, and it now recognized that CIs undergo unimolecular decay to form OH radicals. In this contribution we reveal insight into the chemistry of CIs by highlighting the hitherto neglected multi-state contribution to the ground state unimolecular decay dynamics of the Criegee intermediate products. The two key intermediates of present focus are dioxirane and vinylhydroperoxide – known to be active intermediates that mediate the unimolecular decay of CH2OO and CH3CHOO, respectively. In both cases the unimolecular decay path encounters conical intersections, which may play a pivotal role in the ensuing dynamics. This hitherto unrecognized phenomenon may be vital in the way in which the reactivity of CIs are modelled and is likely to affect the ensuing dynamics associated with the unimolecular decay of a given CI. 
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  3. ABSTRACT Criegee intermediates make up a class of molecules that are of significant atmospheric importance. Understanding their electronically excited states guides experimental detection and provides insight into whether solar photolysis plays a role in their removal from the troposphere. The latter is particularly important for large and functionalized Criegee intermediates. In this study, the excited state chemistry of two small Criegee intermediates, formaldehyde oxide (CH2OO) and acetaldehyde oxide (CH3CHOO), was modeled to compare their specific dynamics and mechanisms following excitation to the bright ππ* state and to assess the involvement of triplet states to the excited state decay process. Following excitation to the bright ππ* state, the photoexcited population exclusively evolves to form oxygen plus aldehyde products without the involvement of triplet states. This occurs despite the presence of a more thermodynamically stable triplet path and several singlet/triplet energy crossings at the Franck‐Condon geometry and contrasts with the photodynamics of related systems such as acetaldehyde and acetone. This work sets the foundations to study Criegee intermediates with greater molecular complexity, wherein a bathochromic shift in the electron absorption profiles may ensure greater removalviasolar photolysis. 
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