A key step in gas-phase polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbon (PAH) formation involves the addition of acetylene (or other alkyne) to σ-type aromatic radicals, with successive additions yielding more complex PAHs. A similar process can happen for N-containing aromatics. In cold diffuse environments, such as the interstellar medium, rates of radical addition may be enhanced when the σ-type radical is charged. This paper investigates the gas-phase ion−molecule reactions of acetylene with nine aromatic distonic σ-type radical cations derived from pyridinium (Pyr), anilinium (Anl), and benzonitrilium (Bzn) ions. Three isomers are studied in each case (radical sites at the ortho, meta, and para positions). Using a room temperature ion trap, second-order rate coefficients, product branching ratios, and reaction efficiencies are measured. The rate coefficients increase from para to ortho positions. The second-order rate coefficients can be sorted into three groups: low, between 1 and 3 × 10 −12 cm 3 molecule −1 s −1 (3Anl and 4Anl); intermediate, between 5 and 15 × 10 −12 cm 3 molecule −1 s −1 (2Bzn, 3Bzn, and 4Bzn); and high, between 8 and 31 × 10 −11 cm 3 molecule −1 s −1 (2Anl, 2Pyr, 3Pyr, and 4Pyr); and 2Anl is the only radical cation with a rate coefficient distinctly different from its isomers. Quantum chemical calculations, using M06-2X-D3(0)/6-31++G(2df,p) geometries and DSD-PBEP86-NL/aug-cc-pVQZ energies, are deployed to rationalize reactivity trends based on the stability of prereactive complexes. The G3X-K method guides the assignment of product ions following adduct formation. The rate coefficient trend can be rationalized by a simple model based on the prereactive complex forward barrier height.
Electrospray ionization (ESI) is used to deliver analytes for mass analysis across a huge range of mass spectrometry applications. Despite its ubiquitous application and many mechanistic investigations, it remains that a fundamental understanding of ESI processes is not complete. In particular, all the factors that influence the populations of protonation isomers are elusive such that it remains a challenge to optimize experimental conditions to favor one isomer over another. The molecule para-aminobenzoic acid has emerged as an archetype for the study of protonation isomers, with both amino and carboxylic acid protonation site isomers (protomers) typically formed upon ESI, with the isomer ratio shown to be sensitive to several physical and chemical parameters. Here we report an ion-trap mass spectrometry study of the time-resolved methanol-catalyzed proton transfer between the amine and carboxylic acid moieties of para-aminobenzoic acid. The experimental and computational results presented are consistent with a bimolecular mechanism where isomerization is mediated by a single methanol rather than a multimolecular Grotthuss proton transfer process. Pseudo-first-order rate constants for protomer specific product ions are reported and confirm the depletion of the amino protomer is correlated to the growth of the carboxylic acid protomer. Under the controlled conditions of a low-pressure ion-trap mass spectrometer (2.5 mTorr, 300 K), the number of methanol molecules required to isomerize para-aminobenzoic acid is determined to be one, and the second-order rate constant for methanol-catalyzed isomerization is (1.9 ± 0.1) × 10–11 cm3 molecule–1 s–1. The para-aminobenzoic acid vehicle mechanism is explored computationally at the DSD-PBEP86-D3BJ/aug-cc-pVDZ level of theory and reveals that the transition state for proton transfer is submerged (−10 kJ mol–1) relative to the separated reactant energies. The findings from this paper show that single-solvent catalyzed intramolecular proton transfer reactions are possible and must be considered during the late stages of ESI to predict the site(s) of protonation and the ion’s stability in the presence of solvent molecules.
Gas phase ion−molecule reactions are central to chemical processes across many environments. A feature of many of these reactions is an inverse relationship between temperature and reaction rate arising from...
Reactions of three protonated benzonitrile radical cations with ethylene are investigated. Product branching ratios and reaction kinetics, measured using ion-trap mass spectrometry, are reported and mechanisms are developed with support from quantum chemical calculations. Reactions proceed via pre-reactive van der Waals complexes with no energy barrier (above the reactant energy) and form radical addition and addition–elimination product ions. Rate coefficients are 4-dehydrobenzonitrilium: 1.72±0.01×10−11 cm3 molecule−1 s−1, 3-dehydrobenzonitrilium: 1.85±0.01×10−11 cm3 molecule−1 s−1, and 2-dehydrobenzonitrilium: 5.96±0.06×10−11 cm3 molecule−1 s−1 (with±50% absolute uncertainty). A ring-closure mechanism involving the protonated nitrile substituent is proposed for the 2-dehydrobenzonitrilium case and suggests favourable formation of the protonated indenimine cation.
Through a combination of ion-mobility filtering and laser-equipped quadrupole ion–trap mass spectrometry, the gas-phase reaction kinetics of two protonation isomers of the distonic-radical quinazoline cation are independently measured with ethylene. For these radical addition reactions, protonation site variations drive significant changes in nearby radical reactivity, and this is primarily due to through–space electrostatic effects. Furthermore, quantum chemical methods specifically designed for calculating long-range interactions, such as double-hybrid density functional theory, are required to rationalize the experimentally measured difference in reactivity.
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