fragmentenes
Fragmentenes are a proposed class of highly reactive hydrocarbon fragments that arise from the fragmentation of larger polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons and related compounds under high-energy conditions such as combustion, pyrolysis, or photolysis. The term fragmentene is used in some theoretical discussions to denote small, often highly strained, polycyclic carbon fragments that retain a net unsaturation and may carry radical character.
Chemical structure: Fragmentenes are typically described as compact polycyclic systems with one or more unsaturated rings
Formation and reactions: They are thought to form via scission of larger PAHs or during retro-Diels-Alder processes,
Detection and evidence: Experimental support relies on indirect evidence from mass spectrometry of combustion products, matrix
Significance and applications: Fragmentenes are discussed mainly as conceptual intermediates in flame chemistry and soot formation
Criticism and status: The concept is debated, with some researchers viewing fragmentene as a convenient placeholder
See also: radical, carbene, diradical, polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbon, combustion chemistry.