332211 wrote:as a layman i see the bond between two atoms has been split up.
how can a laser achive that without removing one of the atoms?
The laser excites and breaks the single bond (the one beweewn CH2-CH2 in the ring below). Then the internal single/double bonds between the carbons reorginze themselves to form 1,3,5-hexatriene.
If you go through it I believe this is all that happens,
1) Single C-C bond is broken (-1 bonds)
2) Three single C-C bonds become double C=C bonds (+3 bonds)
3) Two double C=C bonds become single C-C bonds (-2 bonds)
Overall the total number of carbon bonds does not change since -1+3-2=0.
Make sense?
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