Nist gives the enthalpy of formation of dichlorocarbene and cyclopropanone, thanks a lot, so I could compare standard carbene and carbon monoxide: the cyclopropanation is exothermic with dichlorocarbene and would be endothermic with carbon monoxide, with figures clear enough.
Though, this one difficulty can be solved. Strong and efficient xenon excimer lamps emit at 172nm, the perfect wavelength to excite ethylene, and ArF at 193nm fits heavier alkenes. Even the excited state keeps a fraction of the 690kJ/mol photon, the hoped cyclopropanation is now exothermic.
Will this produce a cyclopropanone or something else? At least the trial and hypothetic production look simple: mix little ethylene (to limit cyclobutane formation) in carbon monoxide, illuminate with a xenon excimer lamp, check for cyclopropanone before it decomposes, or use it for further synthesis. Cold would condense cyclopropanone away from light as it forms.
What do you think?
Marc Schaefer, aka Enthalpy