Domino Tunneling.

J Am Chem Soc

∥Center for Computational Quantum Chemistry and Department of Chemistry, University of Georgia, Athens, Georgia 30602, United States.

Published: June 2015

AI Article Synopsis

  • Matrix-isolation experiments and advanced quantum chemistry reveal that oxalic acid exhibits a unique quantum mechanical tunneling phenomenon, which has not been previously documented.
  • Infrared band intensities were monitored over 19 days after near-infrared irradiation, showing a sequential isomerization of O-H rotamers with half-lives ranging from 30 to 360 hours, despite high energy barriers preventing thermal transitions.
  • A new mathematical model was developed to analyze the complex kinetics of these reactions in different matrix environments, revealing distinct fast and slow decay rates closely aligned with computational predictions for tunneling rates.

Article Abstract

Matrix-isolation experiments near 3 K and state-of-the-art quantum chemical computations demonstrate that oxalic acid [1, (COOH)2] exhibits a sequential quantum mechanical tunneling phenomenon not previously observed. Intensities of numerous infrared (IR) bands were used to monitor the temporal evolution of the lowest-energy O-H rotamers (1cTc, 1cTt, 1tTt) of oxalic acid for up to 19 days following near-infrared irradiation of the matrix. The relative energies of these rotamers are 0.0 (1cTc), 2.6 (1cTt), and 4.0 (1tTt) kcal mol(-1). A 1tTt → 1cTt → 1cTc isomerization cascade was observed with half-lives (t1/2) in different matrix sites ranging from 30 to 360 h, even though the sequential barriers of 9.7 and 10.4 kcal mol(-1) are much too high to be surmounted thermally under cryogenic conditions. A general mathematical model was developed for the complex kinetics of a reaction cascade with species in distinct matrix sites. With this model, a precise, global nonlinear least-squares fit was achieved simultaneously on the temporal profiles of nine IR bands of the 1cTc, 1cTt, and 1tTt rotamers. Classes of both fast (t(1/2) = 30-50 h) and slow (t(1/2) > 250 h) matrix sites were revealed, with the decay rate of the former in close agreement with first-principles computations for the conformational tunneling rates of the corresponding isolated molecules. Rigorous kinetic and theoretical analyses thus show that a "domino" tunneling mechanism is at work in these oxalic acid transformations.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/jacs.5b03322DOI Listing

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