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1.
The Raman xi-function dispersion method recently elucidated for the strong H-bond breaker, ClO4-, in water [G. E. Walrafen, J. Chem. Phys. 122, 094510 (2005)] is extended to the strongly H-bond forming ion, F-. Measuring the xi function is analogous to measuring DeltaG from the thermodynamic activity of the water, aH2O, as the stoichiometric mol fraction of the water in the solution decreases due to addition of an electrolyte or nonelectrolyte. xi is the derivative of the OH-stretching part of the Gibbs free energy with respect to the water mol fraction; xiomega identical with-RT[ partial differential ln(Iomega/IREF) partial differentialX2](T,P). I is the Raman intensity at omega (omega=Raman shift in cm-1); IREF, that at an arbitrary reference omega; and, X2 is the water mol fraction (X1=CsF or KF mol fraction). ln(Iomega/IREF) was found to be linear in X2 for the complete range of OH-stretching omega's, with correlation coefficients as large as 0.999 96. Linearity of ln(Iomega/IREF) versus X2 is an experimental fact for all omega's throughout the spontaneous Raman OH-stretching contour; this fact cannot be negated by relative contributions of ultrafast/fast, homogeneous/inhomogeneous processes which may underlie this linearity. Linearity in ln(Iomega/IREF) versus 1T, or in ln(Iomega/IREF) versus P, was also observed for the Raman H-bond energy DeltaE and pair volume DeltaV dispersions, respectively. A low-frequency maximum (MAX) and a high-frequency minimum (MIN) were observed in the xi function dispersion curve. Deltaxi=xiMIN-xiMAX values of -7000+/-800-cal/mol H2O for CsF, and the experimentally equal Deltaxi=-6400+/-1000-cal/mol H2O for KF, were obtained. These Deltaxi's are opposite in sign but have nearly the same absolute magnitude as the Deltaxi value for NaClO4 in water; Deltaxi=+8050+/-100-cal/mol H2O. A positive Deltaxi corresponds to a water-water H-bond breaker; a negative Deltaxi to a H-bond former; specifically, a F--water H-bond former, in the instant case. NaClO4 breaks water-water H-bonds and also gives rise to weak, long (3.0-3.3 A), severely bent (approximately 140 degrees), high-energy, ClO4--water interactions. Fluoride ion scavenges the extremely weak or non-hydrogen-bonded OH groups, thus forming strong, short, linear, low-energy, H-bonds between F- and water. The strength of the F--water H-bond is evident from the fact that the OH-stretching xi-function minimum is centered approximately 200-300 cm-1 below that of ice. The diagnostic feature of the Raman spectrum from F- in water is an intense, long, low-frequency OH-stretching tail extending 800 cm-1 or more below the 3300-cm-1 peak. A similar intense, long, low-frequency Raman tail is produced by the OH- ion, which is known to H-bond very strongly when protons from water are donated to its oxygen atom.  相似文献   

2.
The dispersion of the H-bond pair volume Delta V over the decoupled OD and coupled OH-stretching contours from HDO in H(2)O was determined from Raman intensities at pressures to 9700 bar at 301 K. The dispersion of Delta V was determined from -RT[partial differential ln(I(i)/I(REF))/ partial differential P](T) versus omega (in cm(-1)), where i refers to omega's over the stretching contours and I(REF) refers to the reference intensity at the isosbestic frequency. The maximum H-bond pair volume (defined for breakage) is 1.4+/-0.1 cm(3)/mol H-bond, which corresponds to the volume difference between a large dispersion maximum at 2,675 cm(-1) (near the OD stretch omega of HDO in dense supercritical water) and a large, broad minimum centered near 2,375 cm(-1) (just below the OD stretch omega of HDO in lda ice). The average DeltaV is 0.71+/-0.10 cm(3)/mol H-bond. Other minima near 2,625 cm(-1) (OD) and 3550 cm(-1) (OH) refers to bent H-bonds whose angles are approximately 150 deg. Isothermal pressurization of water lowers the molal volume by decreasing the concentration of long, weak H-bonds, and increasing the concentrations of bent H-bonds and short, strong, linear H-bonds. Such bending, shortening, and strengthening produces freezing to ice VI near 10 kbar at 301 K. The isobaric temperature derivative of the maximum H-bond volume is (partial differential Delta V/partial differential T)(P)< or =(2-5) x 10(-3) cm(3)/deg mol H-bond. The OH enthalpy dispersion curve for saturated NaBF(4) in water, yields a large maximum at 3,530-3,540 cm(-1) indicating that BF(4) (-) interacts preferentially with the dangling or "free" OH groups of water thus producing weak, strongly bent H-bonds having angles similar to those of the 3,550 cm(-1) high-pressure H-bond bending feature.  相似文献   

3.
We report rate coefficients for the relaxation of OH(v=1) and OD(v=1) by H2O and D2O as a function of temperature between 251 and 390 K. All four rate coefficients exhibit a negative dependence on temperature. In Arrhenius form, the rate coefficients for relaxation (in units of 10(-12) cm3 molecule-1 s-1) can be expressed as: for OH(v=1)+H2O between 263 and 390 K: k=(2.4+/-0.9) exp((460+/-115)/T); for OH(v=1)+D2O between 256 and 371 K: k=(0.49+/-0.16) exp((610+/-90)/T); for OD(v=1)+H2O between 251 and 371 K: k=(0.92+/-0.16) exp((485+/-48)/T); for OD(v=1)+D2O between 253 and 366 K: k=(2.57+/-0.09) exp((342+/-10)/T). Rate coefficients at (297+/-1 K) are also reported for the relaxation of OH(v=2) by D2O and the relaxation of OD(v=2) by H2O and D2O. The results are discussed in terms of a mechanism involving the formation of hydrogen-bonded complexes in which intramolecular vibrational energy redistribution can occur at rates competitive with re-dissociation to the initial collision partners in their original vibrational states. New ab initio calculations on the H2O-HO system have been performed which, inter alia, yield vibrational frequencies for all four complexes: H2O-HO, D2O-HO, H2O-DO and D2O-DO. These data are then employed, adapting a formalism due to Troe (J. Troe, J. Chem. Phys., 1977, 66, 4758), in order to estimate the rates of intramolecular energy transfer from the OH (OD) vibration to other modes in the complexes in order to explain the measured relaxation rates-assuming that relaxation proceeds via the hydrogen-bonded complexes.  相似文献   

4.
The dispersion of the Raman depolarization ratio rho(L) was measured for HDO in H(2)O and in D(2)O. rho(L) for the decoupled OD stretch displays a maximum at 2575 +/- 15 cm(-1) at 296 K and a minimum at 2675 +/- 15 cm(-1), in agreement with the isosbestic point 2570 +/- 10 cm(-1), and the enthalpy dispersion maximum, 2650-2675 cm(-1), respectively. However, three extrema were uncovered in rho(L) for the OH stretch of HDO in D(2)O, and their positions agree with the frequencies of a minimum and a maximum in the enthalpy dispersion and with the isosbestic frequency. The frequency of the rho(L) maximum (OH stretch) lies just above the frequency corresponding to the joint angle-frequency probability maximum. [Lawrence and Skinner, J. Chem. Phys. 118, 264 (2003)]. The low- and high-frequency minima in rho(L) (OH stretch), correspond, respectively, to very strong H-bonds, and extremely weak, long, bent H bonds. The frequencies of the maxima and minima in rho(L) for the decoupled OH and OD stretches are independent of temperature within experimental error between 295 and 368 K. rho(L) was also measured for the OD stretch from saturated NaClO(4) in D(2)OH(2)O; it displays a maximum at 2560 +/- 20 cm(-1) and a sharp minimum at 2650 +/- 5 cm(-1). The shape of the dispersion of (betaalpha)(2) approximately rho(L) for HDO in D(2)O was calculated with the aid of the molecular dynamics results of Lawrence and Skinner. beta(2) is the anisotropic polarizability and alpha is the isotropic polarizability. A maximum resulted in the calculated dispersion at 3400 +/- 10 cm(-1), in excellent agreement with the measured maximum of 3395 +/- 15 cm(-1). The H-bond angles decrease far below 180 degrees as the OH-stretching frequency increases to 3700 cm(-1) and above. Such small H-bond angles, and very large O-O distances, are tantamount to broken H-bonds and are thought to produce the minimum in rho(L) near 2650 cm(-1).  相似文献   

5.
Two-photon excitation with femtosecond laser pulses in the spectral range 240-250 nm was used to prepare vapor phase H(2)O and D(2)O in the C (1)B(1) and D (1)A(1) states. Both states are predissociated via the B (1)A(1) state, forming excited OH/OD(A (2)Sigma(+)) as well as ground state OH/OD(X (2)Pi). We used ultrashort infrared probe pulses (1.65-2.42 microm) to control the ratio between these excited and ground state fragments originating from the dissociation process. Time resolved detection of the OH/OD(A (2)Sigma(+)) --> OH/OD(X (2)Pi) fluorescence allows us to monitor the dynamics of the predissociation. For the heterogeneous predissociation out of the C(1)B(1) state life times of (0.5 +/- 0.1) ps and (1.2 +/- 0.1) ps were found for H(2)O and D(2)O, respectively. The purely homogeneous character of the predissociation out of the D (1)A(1) state was monitored.  相似文献   

6.
The standard molar enthalpies of formation of chloro-, bromo-, and iodoacetic acids in the crystalline state, at 298.15 K, were determined as deltafH(o)m(C2H3O2Cl, cr alpha)=-(509.74+/- 0.49) kJ x mol(-1), deltafH(o)m(C2H3O2Br, cr I)-(466.98 +/- 1.08) kJ x mol(-1), and deltafH(o)m (C2H3O2I, cr)=-(415.44 +/- 1.53) kJ x mol(-1), respectively, by rotating-bomb combustion calorimetry. Vapor pressure versus temperature measurements by the Knudsen effusion method led to deltasubH(o)m(C2H3O2Cl)=(82.19 +/- 0.92) kJ x mol(-1), deltasubH(o)m(C2H3O2Br)=(83.50 +/- 2.95) kJ x mol(-1), and deltasubH(o)m-(C2H3O2I) = (86.47 +/- 1.02) kJ x mol(-1), at 298.15 K. From the obtained deltafH(o)m(cr) and deltasubH(o)m values it was possible to derive deltafH(o)m(C2H3O2Cl, g)=-(427.55 +/- 1.04) kJ x mol(-1), deltafH(o)m (C2H3O2Br, g)=-(383.48 +/- 3.14) kJ x mol(-1), and deltafH(o)m(C2H3O2I, g)=-(328.97 +/- 1.84) kJ x mol(-1). These data, taken with a published value of the enthalpy of formation of acetic acid, and the enthalpy of formation of the carboxymethyl radical, deltafH(o)m(CH2COOH, g)=-(238 +/- 2) kJ x mol(-1), obtained from density functional theory calculations, led to DHo(H-CH2COOH)=(412.8 +/- 3.2) kJ x mol(-1), DHo(Cl-CH2COOH)=(310.9 +/- 2.2) kJ x mol(-1), DHo(Br-CH2COOH)=(257.4 +/- 3.7) kJ x mol(-1), and DHo(I-CH2COOH)=(197.8 +/- 2.7) kJ x mol(-1). A discussion of the C-X bonding energetics in XCH2COOH, CH3X, C2H5X, C2H3X, and C6H5X (X=H, Cl, Br, I) compounds is presented.  相似文献   

7.
Rodenas LG  Liberman SJ 《Talanta》1991,38(3):313-318
The hydrolysis constants of Gd(3+) and the solubility products of Gd(OH)(3) and Gd(OD)(3) in nitrate solutions at 25 and 70 degrees in H(2)O and D(2)O have been determined because of their importance in nuclear technology. The constants are defined (charges omitted for clarity) as *K(11) = a(GdOH)a(H)/a(Gd), *K(21) = a(Gd(OH)(2))a(2)(H)/a(Gd), *K(SO) = a(Gd)/a(3)(H). The values for the H(2)O system were p*K(11) = 7.87 +/- 0.02, p*K(21) = 15.I6 +/- 0.09, p*K(SO) = -19.32 +/- 0.03 at 25 degrees and p*K(11) = 7.55 +/- 0.03, p*K(21) = 13.04 +/- 0.03, p*K(SO) = -16.16 +/- 0.04 at 70 degrees . For the D(2)O system they were p*K(D)(11) = 8.17 +/- 0.01, p*K(D)(21) = 16.00 +/- 0.09, p*K(D)(SO) = -21.18 +/- 0.04 at 25 degrees and p*K(D)(11) = 7.84 +/- 0.02, p*K(D)(21) = 13.95 +/- 0.02, p*K(D)(SO) = -17.34 +/- 0.04 at 70 degrees . The mean enthalpy changes of the reactions were also calculated.  相似文献   

8.
Infrared absorptions for the matrix-isolated lead and tin hydroxides M(OH), M(OH)2 and M(OH)4 (M = Pb, Sn) were observed in laser-ablated metal atom reactions with H2O2 during condensation in excess argon. The major M(OH)2 product was also observed with H2 and O2 mixtures, which allowed the substitution of 18O2. The band assignments were confirmed by appropriate D2O2, D2, 16O18O, and 18O2 isotopic shifts. MP2 and B3LYP calculations were performed to obtain molecular structures and to reproduce the infrared spectra. The minimum energy structure found for M(OH)2 has C(s) symmetry and a weak intramolecular hydrogen bond. In experiments with Sn, HD, and O2, the internal D bond is favored over the H bond for Sn(OH)(OD). The Pb(OH)4 and Sn(OH)4 molecules are calculated to have S4 symmetry and substantial covalent character.  相似文献   

9.
The H-bond energy dispersion over the inhomogeneously broadened OD stretching contour from dilute HDO in H(2)O was determined from absolute Raman intensities; it displays a large minimum near omega=2440 cm(-1) from short, strong H bonds (in agreement with the peak omega from lda ice) and a large maximum near 2650-2675 cm(-1) due to extremely weak or broken H bonds (in agreement with the peak omega from dense, supercritical HDO in H(2)O, 0.9 g/cm(3), 673 K). The difference between extrema is the maximum H-bond DeltaE, 5100+/-500 cal/mol, in excellent agreement with Pauling's limiting value. A pressure of 1500 bars yields an additional maximum and shoulder between the two dispersion extrema from pure water; saturated NaCl in water shows the additional maximum. The maxima near 3350 cm(-1) (1500 bar) or near 3360 cm(-1) (NaCl-H(2)O) arise from bent H bonds; 3350 cm(-1) (1500 bar) corresponding to an angle of approximately 170 degrees in the joint frequency/bend, probability of Lawrence and Skinner. Rising omega refers to a higher probability of larger O-O distances, bent H bonds, and H-bond weakening and breakage. A approximately 50-80 cm(-1) difference between the 2727 cm(-1) OD peak from HDO in steam, and the 2650-2675 cm(-1) dispersion maximum is explained via the very broad approximately 60 cm(-1) liquid peak observed at 342 degrees C and 2000 bar.  相似文献   

10.
The interpretation of 1H‐NMR chemical shifts, coupling constants, and coefficients of temperature dependence (δ(OH), J(H,OH), and Δδ(OH)/ΔT values) evidences that, in (D6)DMSO solution, the signal of an OH group involved as donor in an intramolecular H‐bond to a hydroxy or alkoxy group is shifted upfield, whereas the signal of an OH group acting as acceptor of an intramolecular H‐bond and as donor in an intermolecular H‐bond to (D6)DMSO is shifted downfield. The relative strength of the intramolecular H‐bond depends on co‐operativity and on the acidity of OH groups. The acidity of OH groups is enhanced when they are in an antiparallel orientation to a C−O bond. A comparison of the 1H‐NMR spectra of alcohols in CDCl3 and (D6)DMSO allows discrimination between weak and strong intramolecular H‐bonds. Consideration of IR spectra (CHCl3 or CH2Cl2) shows that the rule according to which the downfield shift of δ(OH) for H‐bonded alcohols in CDCl3 parallels the strength of the H‐bond is valid only for alcohols forming strong intramolecular H‐bonds. The combined analysis of J(H,OH) and δ(OH) values is illustrated by the interpretation of the spectra of the epoxyalcohols 14 and 15 (Fig. 3). H‐Bonding of hexopyranoses, hexulopyranoses, alkyl hexopyranosides, alkyl 4,6‐O‐benzylidenehexopyranosides, levoglucosans, and inositols in (D6)DMSO was investigated. Fully solvated non‐anomeric equatorial OH groups lacking a vicinal axial OR group (R=H or alkyl, or (alkoxy)alkyl) show characteristic J(H,OH) values of 4.5 – 5.5 Hz and fully solvated non‐anomeric axial OH groups lacking an axial OR group in β‐position are characterized by J(H,OH) values of 4.2 – 4.4 Hz (Figs. 4 – 6). Non‐anomeric equatorial OH groups vicinal to an axial OR group are involved in a partial intramolecular H‐bond (J(H,OH)=5.4 – 7.4 Hz), whereas non‐anomeric equatorial OH groups vicinal to two axial OR form partial bifurcated H‐bonds (J(H,OH)=5.8 – 9.5 Hz). Non‐anomeric axial OH groups form partial intramolecular H‐bonds to a cis‐1.3‐diaxial alkoxy group (as in 29 and 41 : J(H,OH)=4.8 – 5.0 Hz). The persistence of such a H‐bond is enhanced when there is an additional H‐bond acceptor, such as the ring O‐atom ( 43 – 47 : J(H,OH)=5.6 – 7.6 Hz; 32 and 33 : 10.5 – 11.3 Hz). The (partial) intramolecular H‐bonds lead to an upfield shift (relative to the signal of a fully solvated OH in a similar surrounding) for the signal of the H‐donor. The shift may also be related to the signal of the fully solvated, equatorial HO−C(2), HO−C(3), and HO−C(4) of β‐D ‐glucopyranose ( 16 : 4.81 ppm) by using the following increments: −0.3 ppm for an axial OH group, 0.2 – 0.25 ppm for replacing a vicinal OH by an OR group, ca. 0.1 ppm for replacing another OH by an OR group, 0.2 ppm for an antiperiplanar C−O bond, −0.3 ppm if a vicinal OH group is (partially) H‐bonded to another OR group, and −0.4 to −0.6 for both OH groups of a vicinal diol moiety involved in (partial) divergent H‐bonds. Flip‐flop H‐bonds are observed between the diaxial HO−C(2) and HO−C(4) of the inositol 40 (J(H,OH)=6.4 Hz, δ(OH)=5.45 ppm) and levoglucosan ( 42 ; J(H,OH)=6.7 – 7.1 Hz, δ(OH)=4.76 – 4.83 ppm; bifurcated H‐bond); the former is completely persistent and the latter to ca. 40%. A persistent, unidirectional H‐bond C(1)−OH⋅⋅⋅O−C(10) is present in ginkgolide B and C, as evidenced by strongly different δ(OH) and Δδ(OH)/ΔT values for HO−C(1) and HO−C(10) (Fig. 9). In the absence of this H‐bond, HO−C(1) of 52 resonates 1.1 – 1.2 ppm downfield, while HO−C(10) of ginkgolide A and of 48 – 50 resonates 0.5 – 0.9 ppm upfield.  相似文献   

11.
The ternary Fe (III)-OH(-)-SO4(2-) complexes have been investigated at 25 degrees C in 3 M NaClO4 by potentiometric titration with glass electrode. The metal and sulfate concentrations ranged from 2.5 x 10(-3) to 0.03 M and from 5.10(-3) to 0.060 M, respectively. [H+] was decreased from 0.05 M to incipient precipitation of basic sulfate which occured at log[H+] between -2.3 and -2.5 depending on the concentration of the metal. For the interpretation of the data stability constants of HSO4(-), of binary hydroxo complexes (FeOH2+, Fe(OH)2+, Fe2(OH)2(4+), Fe3(OH)4(5+), Fe3(OH)5(4+)) and of sulfate complexes (FeSO4+, FeHSO4(2+), Fe(SO4)2-) were assumed from independent sources. The data are consistent with the presence of FeOHSO4, log beta 1-11 = -0.49 +/- 0.03. Equilibrium constants are defined as beta pqr for pFe3+ +qH+ +rSO4(2-) [symbol: see text] FepHq(SO4)r3p+q-2r. No substantial better fit could be found by adding a second mixed complex. Only a slightly smaller agreement factor resulted introducing as minor ternary complex Fe3(OH)6(SO4)3(3-) with log beta 3-63 = -5.8 +/- 0.5. Its evidence, however, cannot be considered conclusive.  相似文献   

12.
The formation of ternary UO2(2+)-(OH-)-SO4(2-) complexes has been studied at 25 degrees C in 3 M NaClO4 ionic medium by measurements with a glass electrode. The solutions had uranium concentrations between 0.3 and 30 mM, sulfate between 20 and 200 mM, and 1.66 < or = [SO4(2-)]/[U(VI)] < or = 300. The hydrogen ion concentration ranged from 10(-3) M to incipient precipitation of basic sulfates. This occurred, depending on the metal concentration, at [H+] between 10(-4) and 10(-5.3) M. In the interpretation of the data the stabilities of binary complexes were assumed from independent sources. The data could be explained with the mixed complexes and equilibria (beta(pqr)(3sigma) refers to pUO2(2+) + qH2O + rSO4(2-) <==> (UO2)p(OH)q(SO4)r(2p-q-2r) + qH+): logbeta222 = -2.94 +/- 0.03, logbeta341 = -9.82 +/- 0.06, logbeta211 = -0.30 +/- 0.09, logbeta212 = 1.09 +/- 0.09, logbeta351 = -15.04 +/- 0.09 and logbeta462 = -14.40 +/- 0.06. The fit could be improved by including UO2OH+ with logbeta110 = -5.1 +/- 0.1. The identity of the minor species remains, however, an open question.  相似文献   

13.
Kinetic and thermodynamic properties of the aminoxyl (NH2O*) radical   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
The product of one-electron oxidation of (or H-atom abstraction from) hydroxylamine is the H2NO* radical. H2NO* is a weak acid and deprotonates to form HNO-*; the pKa(H2NO*) value is 12.6+/-0.3. Irrespective of the protonation state, the second-order recombination of the aminoxyl radical yields N2 as the sole nitrogen-containing product. The following rate constants were determined: kr(2H2NO*)=1.4x10(8) M-1 s-1, kr(H2NO*+HNO-*)=2.5x10(9) M-1 s-1, and kr(2HNO-*)=4.5x10(8) M-1 s-1. The HNO-* radical reacts with O2 in an electron-transfer reaction to yield nitroxyl (HNO) and superoxide (O2-*), with a rate constant of ke(HNO-*+O2-->HNO+O2-*)=2.2x10(8) M-1 s-1. Both O2 and O2-* seem to react with deprotonated hydroxylamine (H2NO-) to set up an autoxidative chain reaction. However, closer analysis indicates that these reactions might not occur directly but are probably mediated by transition-metal ions, even in the presence of chelators, such as ethylenediamine tetraacetic acid (EDTA) or diethylenetriamine pentaacetic acid (DTPA). The following standard aqueous reduction potentials were derived: E degrees (H2NO*,2H+/H3NOH+)=1.25+/-0.01 V; E degrees (H2NO*,H+/H2NOH)=0.90+/-0.01 V; and E degrees (H2NO*/H2NO-)=0.09+/-0.01 V. In addition, we estimate the following: E degrees (H2NOH+*/H2NOH)=1.3+/-0.1 V, E degrees (HNO, H+/H2NO*)=0.52+/-0.05 V, and E degrees (HNO/HNO-*)=-0.22+/-0.05 V. From the data, we also estimate the gaseous O-H and N-H bond dissociation enthalpy (BDE) values in H2NOH, with BDE(H2NO-H)=75-77 kcal/mol and BDE(H-NHOH)=81-82 kcal/mol. These values are in good agreement with quantum chemical computations.  相似文献   

14.
OH/OD product state distributions arising from the reaction of gas-phase O(3P) atoms at the surface of the liquid hydrocarbon squalane C30H62/C30D62 have been measured. The O(3P) atoms were generated by 355 nm laser photolysis of NO2 at a low pressure above the continually refreshed liquid. It has been shown unambiguously that the hydroxyl radicals detected by laser-induced fluorescence originate from the squalane surface. The gas-phase OH/OD rotational populations are found to be partially sensitive to the liquid temperature, but do not adapt to it completely. In addition, rotational temperatures for OH/OD(v'=1) are consistently colder (by 34+/-5 K) than those for OH/OD(v'=0). This is reminiscent of, but less pronounced than, a similar effect in the well-studied homogeneous gas-phase reaction of O(3P) with smaller hydrocarbons. We conclude that the rotational distributions are composed of two different components. One originates from a direct abstraction mechanism with product characteristics similar to those in the gas phase. The other is a trapping-desorption process yielding a thermal, Boltzmann-like distribution close to the surface temperature. This conclusion is consistent with that reached previously from independent measurements of OH product velocity distributions in complementary molecular-beam scattering experiments. It is further supported by the temporal profiles of OH/OD laser-induced fluorescence signals as a function of distance from the surface observed in the current experiments. The vibrational branching ratios for (v'=1)/(v'=0) for OH and OD have been found to be (0.07+/-0.02) and (0.30+/-0.10), respectively. The detection of vibrationally excited hydroxyl radicals suggests that secondary and/or tertiary hydrogen atoms may be accessible to the attacking oxygen atoms.  相似文献   

15.
Vibronically resolved resonant two-photon ionization and dispersed fluorescence spectra of the organometallic radicals CrC(2)H, CrCH(3), and NiCH(3) are reported in the visible and near-infrared wavelength regions. For CrC(2)H, a complicated vibronic spectrum is found in the 11 100-13 300 cm(-1) region, with a prominent vibrational progression having omega(e) (')=426.52+/-0.84 cm(-1), omega(e) (')x(e) (')=0.74+/-0.13 cm(-1). Dispersed fluorescence reveals a v(")=1 level of the ground state with DeltaG(1/2) (")=470+/-20 cm(-1). These vibrational frequencies undoubtedly pertain to the Cr-C(2)H stretching mode. It is suggested that the spectrum corresponds to the A (6)Sigma(+)<--X (6)Sigma(+) band system, with the CrC(2)H molecule being linear in both the ground and the excited state. The related CrCH(3) molecule displays a vibronic spectrum in the 11 500-14 000 cm(-1) region. The upper state of this system displays six sub-bands that are too closely spaced to be vibrational structure, but too widely separated to be K structure. It is suggested that the observed spectrum is a (6)E<--X (6)A(1) band system, analogous to the well-known B (6)Pi<--X (6)Sigma(+) band systems of CrF and CrCl. The ground state Cr-CH(3) vibration is characterized by omega(e) (")=525+/-17 cm(-1) and omega(e) (")x(e) (")=7.9+/-6 cm(-1). The spectrum of NiCH(3) lies in the 16 100-17 400 cm(-1) range and has omega(e) (')=455.3+/-0.1 cm(-1) and omega(e) (')x(e) (')=6.60+/-0.03 cm(-1). Dispersed fluorescence studies provide ground state vibrational constants of omega(e) (")=565.8+/-1.6 cm(-1) and omega(e) (")x(e) (")=1.7+/-3.0 cm(-1). Again, these values correspond to the Ni-CH(3) stretching motion. (c) 2004 American Institute of Physics.  相似文献   

16.
Photodissociation studies of the CH2OD radical in the region 28,000-41,000 cm(-1) (357-244 nm), which includes excitation to the 3s, 3p(x), and 3p(z) states, are reported. H and D photofragments are monitored by using resonance-enhanced multiphoton ionization (REMPI) from the onset of H formation at approximately 30,500 cm(-1) to the origin band region of the 3pz(2A")<--1 2A" transition at 41,050 cm(-1). Kinetic energy distributions P(ET) and recoil anisotropy parameters as a function of kinetic energy, beta(eff)(ET), are determined by the core sampling technique for the channels producing H and D fragments. Two dissociation channels are identified: (I) D+CH2O and (II) H+CHOD. The contribution of channel II increases monotonically as the excitation energy is increased. Based on the calculations of Hoffmann and Yarkony [J. Chem. Phys. 116, 8300 (2002)], it is concluded that conical intersections between 3s and the ground state determine the final branching ratio even when initial excitation accesses the 3px) and 3pz states. The different beta(eff) values obtained for channels I and II (-0.7 and approximately 0.0, respectively) are attributed to the different extents of out-of-plane nuclear motions in the specific couplings between 3s and the ground state (of A' and A' symmetry, respectively) that lead to each channel. The upper limit to the dissociation energy of the C-H bond, determined from P(ET), is D0(C-H)=3.4+/-0.1 eV (79+/-2 kcal/mol). Combining this value with the known heats of formation of H and CH2OD, the heat of formation of CHOD is estimated at DeltaHf(0)(CHOD)=24+/-2 kcal/mol.  相似文献   

17.
The complex [(terpy)(H(2)O)Mn(III)(O)(2)Mn(IV)(OH(2))(terpy)](NO(3))(3) (terpy = 2,2':6,2' '-terpyridine) (1)catalyzes O(2) evolution from either KHSO(5) (potassium oxone) or NaOCl. The reactions follow Michaelis-Menten kinetics where V(max) = 2420 +/- 490 mol O(2) (mol 1)(-1) hr(-1) and K(M) = 53 +/- 5 mM for oxone ([1] = 7.5 microM), and V(max) = 6.5 +/- 0.3 mol O(2) (mol 1)(-1) hr(-1) and K(M) = 39 +/- 4 mM for hypochlorite ([1] = 70 microM), with first-order kinetics observed in 1 for both oxidants. A mechanism is proposed having a preequilibrium between 1 and HSO(5-) or OCl(-), supported by the isolation and structural characterization of [(terpy)(SO(4))Mn(IV)(O)(2)Mn(IV)(O(4)S)(terpy)] (2). Isotope-labeling studies using H(2)(18)O and KHS(16)O(5) show that O(2) evolution proceeds via an intermediate that can exchange with water, where Raman spectroscopy has been used to confirm that the active oxygen of HSO(5-) is nonexchanging (t(1/2) > 1 h). The amount of label incorporated into O(2) is dependent on the relative concentrations of oxone and 1. (32)O(2):(34)O(2):(36)O(2) is 91.9 +/- 0.3:7.6 +/- 0.3:0.51 +/- 0.48, when [HSO(5-)] = 50 mM (0.5 mM 1), and 49 +/- 21:39 +/- 15:12 +/- 6 when [HSO(5-)] = 15 mM (0.75 mM 1). The rate-limiting step of O(2) evolution is proposed to be formation of a formally Mn(V)=O moiety which could then competitively react with either oxone or water/hydroxide to produce O(2). These results show that 1 serves as a functional model for photosynthetic water oxidation.  相似文献   

18.
The N-methylquinolinium tetrafluoroborate (NMQ(+))-sensitized photolysis of the erythro-1,2-diphenyl-2-arylsulfanylethanols 1-3 (1, aryl = phenyl; 2, aryl = 4-methylphenyl; 3, aryl = 3-chlorophenyl) has been investigated in MeCN, under laser flash and steady-state photolysis. Under laser irradiation, the formation of sulfide radical cations of 1-3, in the monomeric (lambda(max) = 520-540 nm) and dimeric form (lambda(max) = 720-->800 nm), was observed within the laser pulse. The radical cations decayed by first-order kinetics, and under nitrogen, the formation of ArSCH(*)Ph (lambda(max) = 350-360 nm) was clearly observed. This indicates that the decay of the radical cation is due to a fragmentation process involving the heterolytic C-C bond cleavage, a conclusion fully confirmed by steady-state photolysis experiments (formation of benzaldehyde and the dimer of the alpha-arylsulfanyl carbon radical). Whereas the fragmentation rate decreases as the C-C bond dissociation energy (BDE) increases, no rate change was observed by the replacement of OH by OD in the sulfide radical cation (k(OH)/k(OD) = 1). This suggests a transition state structure with partial C-C bond cleavage where the main effect of the OH group is the stabilization of the transition state by hydrogen bonding with the solvent. The fragmentation rate of 2-hydroxy sulfanyl radical cations turned out to be significantly slower than that of nitrogen analogues of comparable reduction potential, probably due to a more efficient overlap between the SOMO in the heteroatom and the C-C bond sigma-orbital in the second case. The fragmentation rates of 1(+*)-3(+*) were found to increase by addition of a pyridine, and plots of k(base) against base strength were linear, allowing calculation of the beta Bronsted values, which were found to increase as the reduction potential of the radical cation decreases, beta = 0.21 (3(+*)), 0.34 (1(+*)), and 0.48 (2(+*)). The reactions of 1(+*) exhibit a deuterium kinetic isotope effect with values that increase as the base strength increases: k(OH)/k(OD) = 1.3 (pyridine), 1.9 (4-ethylpyridine), and 2.3 (4-methoxypyridine). This finding and the observation that with the above three bases the rate decreases in the order 3(+*) > 1(+*) > 2(+*), i.e., as the C-C BDE increases, suggest that C-C and O-H bond cleavages are concerted but not synchronous, with the role of OH bond breaking increasing as the base becomes stronger (variable transition state). It is probable that, with the much stronger base, 4-(dimethylamino)pyridine, a change to a stepwise mechanism may occur where the slow step is the formation of a radical zwitterion that then rapidly fragmentates to products.  相似文献   

19.
The crystal structures of four dipeptides that contain the stereochemically constrained gamma-amino acid residue gabapentin (1-(aminomethyl)cyclohexaneacetic acid Gpn) are described. The molecular conformation of Piv-Pro-Gpn-OH (1), reveals a beta-turn mimetic conformation, stabilized by a ten atom C[bond]H...O hydrogen bond between the Piv CO group and the pro S hydrogen of the Gpn CH(2)[bond]CO group. The peptides Boc-Gly-Gpn-OH (2), Boc-Aib-Gpn-OH (3), and Boc-Aib-Gpn-OMe (4) form compact, folded structures, in which a distinct reversal of polypeptide chain direction is observed. In all cases, the Gpn residue adopts a gauche,gauche (g,g) conformation about the C(gamma)[bond]C(beta) (theta(1)) and C(beta)[bond]C(alpha) (theta(2)) bonds. Two distinct Gpn conformational families are observed. In peptides 1 and 3, the average backbone torsion angle values for the Gpn residue are phi=98 degrees, theta(1)=-62 degrees, theta(2)=-73 degrees, and psi=79 degrees, while in peptide 2 and 4 the average values are phi=-103 degrees, theta(1)=-46 degrees, theta(2)=-49 degrees, and psi=-92 degrees. In the case of 1 and 3, an intramolecular nine-membered O[bond]H...O hydrogen bond is formed between the C[double bond]O of the preceding residue and the terminal carboxylic acid OH group. All four alpha-gamma dipeptide sequences yield compact folded backbone conformations; this suggests that the Gpn residue may be employed successfully in the design of novel folded structures.  相似文献   

20.
Monomethylation of the potentially ambident RNH[N(O)NO](-) ion (R = isopropyl or cyclohexyl) has been shown to occur at the terminal oxygen to yield the novel diazeniumdiolate structural unit, RNHN(O)=NOMe. The NH bond of the product proved acidic, with a pK(a) of 12.3 in aqueous solution. The ultraviolet spectrum showed a large bathochromic shift on ionization (lambda(max) 244 --> 284 nm, epsilon(max) 6.9 --> 9.8 mM(-1) cm(-1)). Deprotonation led to a pH-dependent line broadening in the (1)H NMR spectrum of iPrNHN(O)=NOMe, suggesting a complex fluxionality possibly involving isomerizations around the N-N bonds. Consistent with this interpretation, evidence for extensive delocalization and associated changes in bond order on ionizing RNHN(O)=NOR' were found in density functional theory calculations using Gaussian 03 with B3LYP/6-311++G basis sets. With MeNHN(O)=NOMe as a model, all N-N and N-O bonds lengthened by 0.04-0.07 A as a result of ionization except for the MeN-N linkage, which shortened by 7%. These anions can be N-alkylated to generate R(1)R(2)NN(O)=NOR(3) derivatives that would otherwise be difficult to access synthetically. Additionally, some RNHN(O)=NOR' species may display unique and beneficial pharmacological properties. As one example, an agent with R = isopropyl and R' = beta-D-glucosyl was prepared and shown to generate nitric oxide in the presence of glucosidase at pH 5.  相似文献   

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