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High-Resolution Spectroscopic Studies of Reaction Intermediates relevant to Atmospheric Chemistry Yasuki Endo Department of Basic Science The University of Tokyo June/18/2014 ISMS 2014 Urbana
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Main Research Interests High-resolution spectroscopy of short lived reactive species, and complexes FTMW spectroscopy : Observe pure rotational transitions LIF spectroscopy : Electronic transitions Short lived species in the gas phase esp. produced in a supersonic jet Carbon chain molecules Oxygen bearing species Radical complexes
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Vis-UV Laser spectroscopic system YAG Laser pumped dye lasers with resolution up to 0.02 cm -1
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FTMW spectrometer Balle-Flygare type FTMW spectrometer Observe pure rotational transitions in the 4 – 40 GHz region
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Pulsed Discharge Nozzle Pulse Valve Pulsed electric discharge 1.0–2.0 kV, 0.2 msec Free radicals Discharge samples containing appropriate parent molecules in Ar or Ne (0.2 – 0.5 %) to produce target species Radical compexes
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FTMW–mmW Double Resonance Method pump source PDN Sample MW cavity pulsed MW mm-wave as well as cm-wave sources can be used for the pump radiation. It is even possible to use optical or IR sources.
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Oxygen Bearing Short lived Species Species with more than one oxygen atoms HOOH, HOO, FOO, O 3 (well known) X-OO, CH 3 OO, HOOOH, HOOO, … (oxygen chain species cf. carbon chain species) HOCO, H 2 CO 3, HCO 3, CH 2 OO, CH 3 CHOO CH 2 CHO, CH 2 CCHO Oxygen bearing radical complexes H 2 O–OH, Ar–HO 2, HO 2 –H 2 O CO–HOCO, H 2 O–HOCO CH 2 OO–H 2 O important in atmospheric chemistry
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Studies of the HOCO Radical and the Carbonic Acid Important players in atmospheric chemistry CO, CO 2 H 2 O, OH, HO 2 Oxidation reaction of CO OH + CO → OH–CO (1) → HOCO → CO 2 + H Hydration of CO 2 CO 2 + H 2 O → CO 2 –H 2 O (2) → H 2 CO 3 (1) M. I. Lester, B. V. Pond, D. T. Anderson, L. B. Harding, A. F. Wagner, J. Chem. Phys. 113, 9889 (2000). (2) K. I. Peterson, W. Klemperer, J. Chem. Phys. 80, 3439 (1984).
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Oxidation reaction of CO Relative energy (kcal/mol) –30 –20 –10 0 10 t-HOCO (TS4) t-HOCO (TS1) c-HOCO (TS1) OH–CO OH+CO H + CO 2 t-TS C 2v –M c-HOCO (TS2) C 2v –TS cis-HOCO trans-HOCO OH + CO → CO 2 + H reaction
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trans-HOCO and cis-HOCO trans-HOCO Metastable state No gas phase spectra The most stable state Gas phase spectra known cis-HOCO 7.6 kcal/mol 1.8 kcal/mol
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Spectra of cis- and trans-forms μ a = 1.3 Debye μ a = 2.5 Debye 22564.522565.5 22113.5 22114.5 200 Iterations 1 01 –0 00 J=1.5–0.5, F=2–1 cis-HOCOtrans-HOCO 1 : 4.5 Observed for the first time Discharge a mixture of CO and H 2 O in Ar
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Molecular Structures of HOCO cis-HOCO trans-HOCO Data from HOCO and DOCO Red: assumed
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Observation of CO–trans-HOCO 6 06 –5 05 finally 21 a-type transitions 2 b-type transitions has been observed
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Determined Structure of CO–HOCO 2.165 Å 176.6° exp. ab inito A 33915.14(2) 33388 B 1273.450(1) 1280 C 1223.250(1) 1233 RCCSD(T) / aug-cc-pVTZ Carbon side is bonded Fairly short bond length
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Possible Existence of the HOCO–H 2 O Complex cis-form of HOCO S. Aloisio, J. S. Francisco, J. Phys. Chem. A104, 404 (2000). Contribution of the existence of water on the oxidateion of CO
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Cyclic Structure of the H 2 O–HO 2 Complex O1–H3: 1.795 Å Fairly short cf. 2.019 Å (H 2 O) 2 K. Suma, Y. Sumiyoshi, and Y. Endo, Science 311, 1278 (2006)
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Structures of the H 2 O–HOCO Complexes and their Relative Energies
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Observed Spectra of H 2 O–trans-HOCO Two series with different hyperfine patterns
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Molecular Constants of H 2 O–trans-HOCO A’A”ab initio a (B+C)/22450.080(1)2437.687(1)2503 aa 162.9162.9(2) bb 2.43(1) 1.63(5) cc -5.15-5.15(5) aFaF -3.12(6) -3.44(10) T aa 24.66(3) 24.87(14) T aa (H 2 O) 2.53(7) a RCCSD(T) / aug-cc-pVTZ
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Determined Molecular Structures 1.823 Å 1.752 Å (ab initio) Very short hydrogen bond (c.a. 2.0 Å) Binding energy: 8.8 kcal/mol (ab initio) RCCSD(T) / aug-cc-pVTZ
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Observation of the Carbonic Acid H 2 O + CO 2 H 2 O–CO 2 complex studied by FTMW spectroscopy H 2 CO 3 carbonic acid not detected in the gas phase
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Past Theoretical Studies 3 isomers (1) cis-ciscis-transtrans-trans Stability (2) H 2 CO 3 + n H 2 O → CO 2 + (n + 1) H 2 O half-life, n = 0: 0.18 million years n = 1: 10 hours n = 2: 2 minutes Endothermic for the production of H 2 CO 3 half-life (log t /s) (1) B. Jönsson et al, Chem. Phys. Lett. 41, 317 (1976). (2) T. Loerting et al., Angew. Chem., Int. Ed. 39, 891 (2000).
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Ab initio Calculations 0 00 0 90 180 φ1φ1 φ2φ2 cis-ciscis-transtrans-trans MOLPRO 2008.1 CCSD(T)/cc-pVTZ Energy [kcal/mol] φ1φ1 φ2φ2
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Molecular Structure of cis-trans H 2 CO 3 122.9° 126.8° 1.188 Å r(C=O) : 1.202 Å (HCOOH) 1.208 Å (H 2 CO) r(C–O) : 1.343 Å (HCOOH) 1.425 Å (CH 3 OH) ∠ (O=C–O) : 124.9°(HCOOH) 1.345 Å 1.357 Å Although this is a higher energy isomer, it has a large dipole moment and is rather easier to detect
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Molecular Structure of cis-cis H 2 CO 3 125.7° 1.202 Å r(C=O) : 1.202 Å (HCOOH) 1.208 Å (H 2 CO) r(C–O) : 1.343 Å (HCOOH) 1.425 Å (CH 3 OH) ∠ (O=C–O) : 124.9°(HCOOH) 1.340 Å It is the most stable isomer. Spectra were weaker since the dipole moment is smaller.
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Isomers of H 2 CO 3 0 00 0 90 180 φ1φ1 φ2φ2 cis-ciscis-transtrans-trans No spectrum was observed for the trans-trans isomer since the barrier to the cis-trans form is so low.
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Detection of Bicarbonate Radical Slightly exothermic (RCCSD(T)/cc-pVTZ)
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Observed Spectral Pattern Discharge H 2 O + CO 2 mixture, many paramagnetic lines
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An Example of the Observed Line 1000 times accumulation 2 02 – 1 01 J = 2.5 – 1.5 F = 3 – 2 In general, signals were very weak
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Determined Molecular Constants for HCO 3 exp.ab initio a FCO 2 b A13725.26(5)1392813752.2 B11263.93(4)1119811310.3 C 6170.11(4)6207 6192.8 aa –130.1(3) -83.4 bb –675.9(3) -794.7 cc –47.57(4) -44.2 aFaF 9.96(5) T aa 5.60(3) T bb –0.68(3) a RCCSD(T)-F12a / aug-cc-pVTZ b L. Kolesnikova et al., JCP 128, 224302 (2008)
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Detection of CH 2 OO Criegee Intermediate (CI): R 1 R 2 COO (carbonyl oxide) Intermediate in the ozonolysis process of alkene + O 3 Ozonolysis Process of Alkene: First proposed by Rudolf Criegee Justus Liebig Ann. Chem. 564, 9 (1949). Angew. Chem., Int. Ed. Engl. 14, 745 (1975).
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Previous studies of CH 2 OO Gas-phase Spectra of CH 2 OO M. I. Lester group JACS 134, 20045 (2012). Y.P. Lee group Science 340, 174 (2013). No direct information for the structure… B-state: Repulsive
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Observed Spectra of CH 2 OO CH 2 OO: 1 01 -0 00 CH 2 OO: 2 02 -1 01 FTMW spectrumFTMW-mmW DR spectrum 400-shots (CH 2 Br 2 + O 2 ) disch. now (CH 2 I 2 + O 2 ) disch. : very strong signals
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Determined Molecular Structure of CH 2 OO Ab initioFit 1Fit 2 r OO / Å 1.3411.344(1)1.345(3) r CO / Å 1.2681.274(1)1.272(3) r CH (cis) / Å 1.0821.147(15)1.094(1) r CH (trans) / Å 1.0791.118(7)1.088(4) OOC / deg. 117.95118.06(2)118.02(3) OCH (cis) / deg. 118.6108.2(22)118.0(6) OCH (trans) / deg. 114.9120.8(13)114.9(fix) fit / MHz 1.112.83 long O-O bond zwitterion like structure Structure from CH 2 OO CD 2 OO CH 2 18 O 2 CD 2 18 O 2
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More Papers for CH 2 OO FTMW, more isotopologues, refined structure M. C. McCarthy et al., J. Phys. Chem. Lett., 4, 4133 (2013) Sub-mm wave spectrum A. M. Daly et al., J. Mol. Spectrosc., 297, 16 (2014)
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Detection of Methyl Derivatives Internal Rotation of the Methyl-tops Higher Barrier due to the interaction with O atom Lower Barrier 3.7 kcal/mol higher in energy
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Rotational Transitions of syn-CH 3 CHOO UV absorption by J. M. Beames et al. JCP 138, 244307 (2013) red: FTMW blue: FTMW-mmw-DR (CH 3 CHI 2 + O 2 ) disch.
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Observed Transitions of syn-CH 3 CHOO (a) FTMW spectrum (b) FTMW-mmw-DR spectrum Very small splittings for the internal rotation
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Rotational Transitions of anti-CH 3 CHOO red: FTMW blue: FTMW-mmw-DR Signals are 1/3 – 1/4 times weaker than those of syn- CH 3 CHOO
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Observed Transitions of anti-CH 3 CHOO Observed by FTMW spectroscopy Relatively Large A–E splittings EA
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Determined Parameters for CH 3 CHOO
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Water Complex of CH 2 OO 1.872 Å 2.114 Å Cyclic Structure (CCSD(T)/aug-cc-pVTZ) Double hydrogen bonds cf. H 2 O–HOO Relatively short OO...HO bond length Enhance hydrogen migration to produce the OH radical
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Rotational Transitions of CH 2 OO–H 2 O (CH 2 I 2 + O 2 + H 2 O) disch. red: FTMW blue: FTMW-mmw-DR Tansitions of CH 2 OO–D 2 O were also observed (detection was confirmed)
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Determined Parameters for the Water Complex
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Determined Structure 1.910 Å (1.872 Å) 2.123 Å (2.114 Å) The hydrogen bond is shorter than usual Cyclic structure like HO 2 –H 2 O CH 2 OO: proton acceptor
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Conclusions for the Studies of Criegees The simplest Criegee, CH 2 OO, was identified by FTMW spectroscopy, and structure has been determined. Nakajima and Endo, JCP 139, 101103 (2013) Both syn- and anti-forms of CH 3 CHOO were identified, where barriers for the internal rotations were determined. Nakajima and Endo, JCP 140, 101101 (2013) Criegee–Water complex, CH 2 OO–H 2 O, was identified by FTMW spectroscopy, and cyclic form was confirmed, which is expected to enhance the hydrogen migration producing the OH radical. Nakajima and Endo, JCP 140, 1034302 (2014)
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Other Studies Carbon chain species (FTMW and LIF) CCS, HCCN, CCCF, CCCCl, SiCCN, SiCCCN, SiCCH Vinoxy derivatives (FTMW and LIF) CH 2 =CHO, CH 2 =CHS, CHCH 3 =CHO, CH 2 =CCH 3 S, CH 2 =C=CHO Atom–diatom systems (FTMW) Rg–OH, Rg–SH, Rg–NO, Rg–CS
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Acknowledgement Prof. M. Nakajima (U. Tokyo) Criegees Prof. Y. Sumiyoshi (Gumma Univ.) Dr. T. Mori (Horiba Co. Ltd.)H 2 CO 3, HCO 3 Dr. T. Oyama (Tokyo Science Univ.)HOCO and other graduate students Financial Support JSPS funds
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