AI Article Synopsis

  • Understanding proton-bound complexes is important for grasping chemical reactivity and molecular interactions.
  • This study focuses on the complex formed between dihydrogen phosphate and formate, using IR action spectroscopy in helium droplets.
  • Findings reveal that contrary to expectations, protons are primarily located in the phosphate, and dynamics in partially deuterated complexes lead to changes in structure when IR light is applied.

Article Abstract

Understanding the structural and dynamic properties of proton-bound complexes is crucial for elucidating fundamental aspects of chemical reactivity and molecular interactions. In this work, the proton-bound complex between dihydrogen phosphate and formate, and its deuterated counterparts, is investigated using IR action spectroscopy in helium droplets. Contrary to the initial expectation that the stronger phosphoric acid would donate a proton to formate, both experiment and theory show that all exchangeable protons are located in the phosphate moiety. The experimental spectra show good agreement with both scaled harmonic and VPT2 anharmonic calculations, indicating that anharmonic effects are small. Some H-bending modes of the nondeuterated complex are found to be sensitive to the helium environment. In the case of the partially deuterated complexes, the experiments indicate that internal dynamics leads to isomeric interconversion upon IR excitation.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11163467PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acs.jpca.4c01632DOI Listing

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