Cyano radical
The cyano radical is a radical with molecular formula CN, sometimes written •CN. The cyano radical was one of the first detected molecules in the interstellar medium, in 1938. Its detection and analysis was influential in astrochemistry. The discovery was confirmed with a coudé spectrograph, which was made famous and credible due to this detection. ·CN has been observed in both diffuse clouds and dense clouds. Usually, CN is detected in regions with hydrogen cyanide, hydrogen isocyanide, and HCNH+, since it is involved in the creation and destruction of these species.
Physical properties
Bonding in the cyano radical can be described as a combination of two resonance structures: the structure with the unpaired electron on the carbon is the minor contributor, while the structure with the unpaired electron on the nitrogen is the major contributor. The charge separation in the isocyano radical is similar to that of carbon monoxide. •CN has a dipole moment of 1.45 debyes and a 2Σ+ ground electronic state. The selection rules are:where N is the angular momentum, S is the electric spin, and = 1 is the nuclear spin of 14N.
Formation and destruction of •CN
Formation
- Dissociative recombination in diffuse clouds:
- :HCN+ + e− → •CN + H•
- Photodissociation in dense clouds:
- :HCN + hν → •CN + H•