Abstract
The reaction of toluene (T) with OH● produces addition products as well as the benzyl radical (TR). TR can react with OH● or O2 to produce oxygenated species, for many of which there is no experimental information available. We present here theoretically determined heats of formation (HFs) of 17 such species using the non-isodesmic reactions on the potential energy surface (PES) of TR+O2 and T+OH●+O2. For those species the experimental HFs of which are known, we obtained a good correlation between experimental and theoretical values at the G4 (r2=0.999) and M06/cc-pVQZ (r2=0.997) levels, thus showing the goodness of the methods used. Previously unknown HFs of other radicals (benzyloxyl, spiro [1,2-dioxetane benzyl], hydroxyphenyl, and benzylperoxyl) and closed shell species (salicylic alcohol, benzo[b]oxetane and p-hydroxy cyclohexa-2,5-dienone) were later determined using those methods.