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1.
J Phys Chem A ; 112(35): 8129-35, 2008 Sep 04.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-18698743

ABSTRACT

Hydrogen-bonded gas-phase molecular clusters of dihydrogen trioxide (HOOOH) have been investigated using DFT (B3LYP/6-311++G(3df,3pd)) and MP2/6-311++G(3df,3pd) methods. The binding energies, vibrational frequencies, and dipole moments for the various dimer, trimer, and tetramer structures, in which HOOOH acts as a proton donor as well as an acceptor, are reported. The stronger binding interaction in the HOOOH dimer, as compared to that in the analogous cyclic structure of the HOOH dimer, indicates that dihydrogen trioxide is a stronger acid than hydrogen peroxide. A new decomposition pathway for HOOOH was explored. Decomposition occurs via an eight-membered ring transition state for the intermolecular (slightly asynchronous) transfer of two protons between the HOOOH molecules, which form a cyclic dimer, to produce water and singlet oxygen (Delta (1)O 2). This autocatalytic decomposition appears to explain a relatively fast decomposition (Delta H a(298K) = 19.9 kcal/mol, B3LYP/6-311+G(d,p)) of HOOOH in nonpolar (inert) solvents, which might even compete with the water-assisted decomposition of this simplest of polyoxides (Delta H a(298K) = 18.8 kcal/mol for (H 2O) 2-assisted decomposition) in more polar solvents. The formation of relatively strongly hydrogen-bonded complexes between HOOOH and organic oxygen bases, HOOOH-B (B = acetone and dimethyl ether), strongly retards the decomposition in these bases as solvents, most likely by preventing such a proton transfer.

2.
J Chem Inf Model ; 45(1): 58-64, 2005.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-15667129

ABSTRACT

In the study of the reaction pathways of the ClO + NO2 reaction including reliable structures of the reactants, products, intermediates, and transition states as well as energies the MP2/6-311G(d), B3LYP/6-311G(d), and G2(MP2) methods have been employed. Chlorine nitrate, ClONO2, is formed by N-O association without an entrance barrier and is stabilized by 29.8 kcal mol(-1). It can undergo either a direct 1,3 migration of Cl or OCl rotation to yield an indistinguishable isomer. The corresponding barriers are 45.8 and 7.1 kcal mol(-1), respectively. ClONO2 can further decompose into NO3 + Cl with an endothermicity of 46.4 kcal mol(-1). The overall endothermicity of the NO2 + ClO --> NO3 + Cl reaction is calculated to be 16.6 kcal mol(-1). The formation of cis-perp and trans-perp conformer of chlorine preoxynitrite, ClOONO(cp) and ClOONO(tp), are exothermic by 5.4 and 3.8 kcal mol(-1), respectively. Calculations on the possible reaction pathways for the isomerization of ClOONO to ClONO2 showed that the activation barriers are too high to account for appreciable nitrate formation from peroxynitrite isomerization. All quoted relative energies are related to G2(MP2) calculations.

3.
J Phys Chem A ; 109(45): 10357-62, 2005 Nov 17.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16833331

ABSTRACT

A theoretical study of the low-lying singlet and triplet states of ClONO is presented. Calculations of excitation energies and oscillator strengths are reported using multireference configuration interaction, MRD-CI, methods with the cc-pVDZ + sp basis set. The calculations predict the dominant transition, 4(1)A' <-- 1(1)A', at 5.70 eV. The transition 2(1)A' <-- 1(1)A', at 4.44 eV, with much lower intensity nicely matches the experimental absorption maximum observed around 290 nm (4.27 eV). The potential energy curves for both states are found to be highly repulsive along the Cl-O coordinate implying that direct and fast dissociation to the Cl + NO2 products will occur. Photodissociation along the N-O coordinate is less likely because of barriers on the order of 0.3 eV for low-lying excited states. A comparison between the calculated electronic energies related to the two dominant excited states of ClONO and BrONO indicates that the transitions lie about 0.6 eV higher if bromine is replaced by chlorine. The stratospheric chemistry implications of ClONO and BrONO are discussed.

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