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Rotational isomers of small molecules in noble-gas solids: From monomers to hydrogen-bonded complexes

✍ Scribed by Leonid Khriachtchev


Book ID
103838119
Publisher
Elsevier Science
Year
2008
Tongue
English
Weight
292 KB
Volume
880
Category
Article
ISSN
0022-2860

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✦ Synopsis


Molecular conformation, quantum tunneling, and hydrogen bonding play important roles in various photochemical processes. We have studied a number of small molecules possessing rotational isomerism (HONO, formic acid, acetic acid, etc.) isolated in noblegas solid matrices. Selective vibrational excitation efficiently promotes the conformational change in the excited molecule, which allows preparation of higher-energy conformers. Stability of the higher-energy conformers is often limited by quantum tunneling of hydrogen as observed for some carboxylic acids (formic, acetic, etc.). The tunneling mechanism is supported by the strong H/D isotope effect and characteristic temperature dependence with a clear low-temperature limit. The reaction barrier height is an important factor in a tunneling process; however, other factors also play an essential role. The energy mismatch between the initial state of the higher-energy conformer and accepting state of the ground-state conformer is probably important. Hydrogen bonding can change tunneling decay rate of unstable conformers. The trans-cis formic acid dimer was prepared by vibrational excitation of the trans-trans form in neon and argon matrices. Tunneling decay of cis formic acid is substantially slower in the dimeric form compared to monomer, especially in solid neon. This stabilization effect is explained by a complexation-induced increase of reaction barrier, which is confirmed computationally. The complex between cis formic acid and water was prepared in an argon matrix and found to be stable at low-temperatures. These results show that intrinsically unstable conformational structures can be thermodynamically stabilized in asymmetrical hydrogen-bonded network. This effect occurs when the energy difference between conformers is smaller than the hydrogen bond interaction energy, which allows chemistry of unstable conformers to be studied.