## Abstract __The effect of a single water molecule on the reaction mechanism of the gas‐phase reaction between formic acid and the hydroxyl radical was investigated with high‐level quantum mechanical calculations using DFT–B3LYP, MP2 and CCSD(T) theoretical approaches in concert with the 6‐311+G(2
The gas phase reaction of carbonyl oxide with hydroxyl radical in presence of water vapor. A theoretical study on the reaction mechanism
✍ Scribed by Alex Mansergas; Javier González; Manuel Ruiz-López; Josep M. Anglada
- Publisher
- Elsevier
- Year
- 2011
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 903 KB
- Volume
- 965
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 2210-271X
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✦ Synopsis
The effect of water vapor on the reaction mechanism of carbonyl oxide with hydroxyl radical has been investigated by using theoretical methods. Our calculations predict that the addition of the HO radical to the carbon atom of H 2 COO is the most favorable reaction path, as also found for the reaction without water. The water molecule produces a stabilizing effect close to 4 kcal/mol. The fate of the reaction is the peroxy radical complex H 2 C(OH)OOÁÁÁH 2 O, which can decompose into H 2 CO + H 2 O + HO 2 . Therefore, this reaction mechanism corresponds to the inverse process of the water-assisted oxidation of formaldehyde by the hydroperoxyl radical. The abstraction of a hydrogen atom from carbonyl oxide has been investigated too and has been shown to involve a quite high energy barrier suggesting that such a process cannot occur in tropospheric conditions. Finally, we have studied the addition of water to carbonyl oxide assisted by the hydroxyl radical and the results highlight an important catalytic effect of the later species.
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