The Far Ultraviolet Absorption Spectra and Ionization Potentials of the Alkyl Halides. Part II

The absorption spectra of the ethyl and higher halides have been examined in the region 2000–1000A. It has been found that they are essentially similar to those of the methyl halides. The ionization potentials of ethyl iodide are given as 9.30 and 9.88 volts and those of ethyl bromide as 10.24 and 10.56 volts. The ionization potentials of the higher halides cannot be determined exactly because of the presence of continuous absorption from the C–C and C–H bonds, and of the diffuseness of the bands themselves. However there is strong evidence that the ionization potentials of consecutive members of the homologous series diminish asymptotically to a limiting value, the diminution from methyl to ethyl being by far the greatest. A comparison of the way the ionization potentials diminish and the dipole moments of the carbon‐halogen bonds increase as we ascend the homologous series indicates a definite connection between the two phenomena.