The QCISD and QCISD(T) quantum chemical methods have been used to characterize the energetics of various possible mechanisms for the formation of HCF2+ from the bond-forming reaction of CF3(2+) with H2. The stationary points on four different pathways leading to the product combinations HCF2+ + H+ + F and HCF2+ + HF+ have been calculated. All four pathways begin with the formation of a collision complex [H2-CF3]2+, followed by an internal hydrogen atom migration to give HC(FH)F2(2+). In two of the mechanisms, immediate charge separation of HC(FH)F2(2+) via loss of either HF+ or a proton, followed by loss of an F atom, yields the experimentally observed bond-forming product HCF2+. For the other two mechanisms, internal hydrogen rearrangement of HC(FH)F2(2+) to give C(FH)2F(2+), followed by charge separation, yields the product CF2H+. This product can then overcome a 2.04 eV barrier to rearrange to the HCF2+ isomer, which is 1.80 eV more stable. All four calculated mechanisms are in agreement with the isotope effects and collision energy dependencies of the product ion cross sections that have been previously observed experimentally following collisions between CF3(2+) and H2/D2. We find that in this open-shell system, CCSD(T) and QCISD(T) T1-diagnostic values of up to 0.04 are acceptable. A series of angularly resolved crossed-beam scattering experiments on collisions of CF3(2+) with D2 have also been performed. These experiments show two distinct channels leading to the formation of DCF2+. One channel appears to correspond to the pathway leading to the ground state 1DCF2+ + D+ + F product asymptote and the other to the 3DCF2+ + D+ + F product asymptote, which is 5.76 eV higher in energy. The experimental kinetic energy releases for these channels, 7.55 and 1.55 eV respectively, have been determined from the velocities of the DCF2+ product ion and are in agreement with the reaction mechanisms calculated quantum chemically. We suggest that both of these observed experimental channels are governed by the reaction mechanism we calculate in which charge separation occurs first by loss of a proton, without further hydrogen atom rearrangement, followed by loss of an F atom to give the final products 1DCF2+ + D+ + F or 3DCF2+ + D+ + F.
An experimental and computational study has been performed to investigate the bond-forming reactivity between Ar(2+) and NH(3). Experimentally, we detect two previously unobserved bond-forming reactions between Ar(2+) and NH(3) forming ArN(+) and ArNH(+). This is the first experimental observation of a triatomic product ion (ArNH(+)) following a chemical reaction of a rare gas dication with a neutral. The intensity of ArNH(+) was found to decrease with increasing collision energy, with a corresponding increase in the intensity of ArN(+), indicating that ArN(+) is formed by the dissociation of ArNH(+). Key features on the potential energy surface for the reaction were calculated quantum chemically using CASSCF and MRCI methods. The calculated reaction mechanism, which takes place on a singlet surface, involves the initial formation of an Ar-N bond to give Ar-NH(3)(2+). This complexation is followed by proton loss via a transition state, and then loss of the two remaining hydrogen atoms in two subsequent activationless steps to give the products (3)ArN(+) + H(+) + 2H. This calculated pathway supports the sequential formation of ArN(+) from ArNH(+), as suggested by the experimental data. The calculations also indicate that no bond-forming pathway exists on the ground triplet surface for this system.
Ground-state stationary points on the potential energy surface of the reaction CF22++H2O→OCF++HF+H+ were calculated using the density-functional theory hybrid method B3LYP and the ab initio coupled cluster singles and doubles with perturbative triples [CCSD(T)] algorithm. The calculations reveal a reaction mechanism involving two transition states. The first transition state involves the migration of one hydrogen within the primary collision complex and the second corresponds to the loss of a proton. The neutral HF molecular product is formed in its stable ground Σ1 state. Comparison of activation energies for the reactions of CF22+ with H2O and with D2O, calculated from Becke three parameter Lee–Yang–Parr (B3LYP) zero-point energies, slightly favor the H2O pathway by 0.04 and 0.07 eV for the first and second activations, respectively. Rate constant calculations using Rice–Ramsperger–Kassel–Marcus/quasiequilibrium theory also kinetically favor the H2O pathway in comparison with the D2O pathway. However, the magnitudes of the calculated rate constants are so large (1012–1014 s−1) that the differences between the rates of reaction of CF22+ with H2O and with D2O should not be distinguished by a crossed-beam time-of-flight mass spectrometer experiment. Indeed, the ion yields reported in this paper from new collision experiments between CF22+ and D2O showed no isotope effect when compared with previous data from collisions of CF22+ with H2O.
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