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  • Analytical Chemistry and Spectroscopy  (4)
  • Cavitand  (1)
  • 1
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    New York, NY : Wiley-Blackwell
    Rapid Communications in Mass Spectrometry 1 (1987), S. 61-63 
    ISSN: 0951-4198
    Keywords: Chemistry ; Analytical Chemistry and Spectroscopy
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Physics
    Additional Material: 3 Ill.
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  • 2
    ISSN: 0030-493X
    Keywords: Chemistry ; Analytical Chemistry and Spectroscopy
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Chemistry and Pharmacology
    Notes: Part of the C3H5O2+ potential energy surfae was investiated by ab initio MO calculations executed at the MP3/6-31G*//4-31G + ZPVE and MP3/6-31G*//MP2/6-31G* + ZPVE levels of theory and by mass spectrometric experiments to ascetain whether carbonyl-protonated β-propiolactone ions , a, can interconvert with protonated acrylic acid, CH2=CHC(OH)2+, e, as claimed in a recent thermolysis study. Theory and experiment show that the lowest energy isomers are ions CH2=CHC(OH)2+, e, ΔHf = 385 kJ mol-1, , a, ΔHf = 408 kJ mol-1, , b, ΔHf = 424 kJ mol-1 and HOCH2CH2CH2CO+, f, ΔHf = 447 kJ mol-1. At the Hartree-Fock (HF) level of theory, the carboxyethylium ions CH2CH2COOH+, c, and CH3CHCOOH+, d, are minima lying much higher in energy (∼ 160 kJ mol-1 above e). Loss of I· from CH3CH(I)COOH produces ion d (or a structure akin to it) which displays characteristic collisional activation (CA) and neutralization-reionization (NR) spectra. Loss of I· from ICH2CH2COOH is proposed toyield ions a (via anchimeric assistance) rather than c. Metastable ions a, b, c, d and f freely interconvert, but ions e do not communicate with these ions. It is concluded that the observed equilibrium a ⇌ e in solution is due to an intermolecular process. Contrary to earlier suggestions, ions a do not undergo cycloreversion to HOCO+ + C2H4 and to CH2=COH+ + CH2O, but rather they spontaneously dissociate CH3CHOH+ + CO, CH3CO+ + CH2O, CH2=CHCO+ + H2O and CH3CH2+ + CO2. The product ions of these dissociation were characterized by double collision experiments andmechanisms for their formation are proposed. In this context, the dissociation behaviour of the following isomers was also examined: [CH2O…H…CH2CO]+, g, [CH2O…H…OCCH2]+, h, CH3CH(OH)CO+, i, , j, CH3C(=O)OCH2+, k, and CH3CH2OCO+, l. NR spectra indicate that the radicals d and e are stable species, paalleling, in part, results from ESR Spectroscopy. Analysis of appropriate isodesmic reactions indicates that the α-COOH group in ion d behaves as a hyudrogen atom and therefore this group cannot be said to destabilize the adjacet positive charge. This provides a rationalization for the observation that in solution α-carbonyl cations can be formed at rates comparable to the unsubstituted analogues. On inclusion of electron correlation in the geometry optimization, the structure of ion d is transformed into that of a 2-methyl-1-hydroxiratranyl cation, d1. The asymmetry in the O—C bond lengths in the oxiranyl ring reflects a trade-off between conjugative stabilization and ring strain energy. Ion c is found to adopt a bridged structure, c1, with a geometry strikingly similar to that of the bridged ethyl cation. Ions c1 and d1 have similar relative energies (148 and 135 kJ mol- above e) and are interconnected bya very low-lying transition state and hence they may freely interconvert. The appearance energy for loss of I· from CH3CH(I)COOH leads to (a) product(s) ΔHf of 145 kJ mol-1 and may therefore correspond to a mixture of ions c1, and d1.
    Additional Material: 6 Ill.
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  • 3
    ISSN: 0030-493X
    Keywords: Chemistry ; Analytical Chemistry and Spectroscopy
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Chemistry and Pharmacology
    Notes: Rearrangement and dissociation processes of solitary ethane-1,2-diol radical cations were investigated by ab initio MO calculations, executed at the SDCI/RHF/DZP level of theory, including Pople-type size-consistency corrections. In order to obtain an accurate description of the chemistry involved, part of the potential energy surface was investigated by using the multi-reference CI method and also by using the valence bond (VB) method followed by SDCI calculations using the natural orbitals of the VB wavefunction. The ethane-1,2-diol radical cation is metastable with respect to CH3OH2+ + HCO·; it has been shown recently that the isotopologue DOCH2CH2OD loses (exclusively) HCO· to produce CH2DOHD+, not the isotopomer CH3OD2+ expected from earlier mechanistic proposals. We have traced a low-energy pathway which explains the observed label distribution and which takes place at the experimentally derived energy level. First, ionized ethane-1,2-diol collapses to the one-electron bond species [HOCH2‥ + ·‥CH2OH]+· which subsequently rearranges to the hydrogen-bonded species CH2=O…HO(H)CH2+·. Next, transformation to the transient CH2=O…HCH2OH+· takes effect and this rearrangement can be viewed as the 1,2-hydrogen shift, CH2OH2+· → CH3OH+·, catalyzed by formaldehyde. Following this, charge transfer takes place from the methanol cation to the formaldehyde molecule which thus becomes charged; because it is now charged, the formaldehyde unit can rotate and donate a proton to the methanol molecule, after which dissociation follows. Our calculations and experimental results can be interpreted in terms of proton shifts rather than hydrogen shifts taking place in ion-molecule (proton-bound) complexes.
    Additional Material: 3 Ill.
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  • 4
    ISSN: 0009-2940
    Keywords: Cavitand ; Electrochemistry ; Iron sulfur cluster ; Metalloprotein model ; Chemistry ; Inorganic Chemistry
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Chemistry and Pharmacology
    Notes: NMR and Mössbauer spectroscopy show that a novel tetrathiol ligand, based on the cavitand diphenylglycoluril, encapsulates a 4Fe-4S cluster and induces asymmetry in it. The cluster gives a weak electrochemical current response in DMF, with a half-wave potential for the 2-/3- reduction vs. Fc+/Fc of -1.7 V. Ba2+ ions are adsorbed, according to X-ray analysis of the SEM image of the electrode, and act as modulator and promoter of the electrochemical response. On the basis of cyclic voltammograms it is proposed that this adsorption creates electroactive sites, changing the type of diffusion controlling the mass transport to the electrode from radial to linear, and that it helps the negatively charged complex, which contains a dipole, to approach the negative electrode in an orientation favourable for electron exchange. This feature makes the complex an important model for ferredoxins, in spite of a difference in redox potential.
    Additional Material: 10 Ill.
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  • 5
    ISSN: 0030-493X
    Keywords: Chemistry ; Analytical Chemistry and Spectroscopy
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Chemistry and Pharmacology
    Notes: By combining results from a variety of mass spectrometric techniques (metastable ion, collisional activation, collision-induced dissociative ionization, neutralization-reionization spectrometry, 2H, 13C and 18O isotopic labelling and appearance energy measurements) and high-level ab initio molecular orbital calculations, the potential energy surface of the [CH5NO]+ · system has been explored. The calculations show that at least nine stable isomers exist. These include the conventional species [CH3ONH2]+ · and [HO—CH2—NH2]+ ·, the distonic ions [O—CH2—NH3]+ ·, [O—NH2—CH3]+ ·, [CH2—O(H)—NH2]+ ·, [HO—NH2—CH2]+ ·, and the ion-dipole complex CH2=NH2+ … OH·. Surprisingly the distonic ion [CH2—O—NH3]+ · was found not to be a stable species but to dissociate spontaneously to CH2=O + NH3+ ·. The most stable isomer is the hydrogen-bridged radical cation [H—C=O … H … NH3]+ · which is best viewed as an immonium cation interacting with the formyl dipole. The related species [CH2=O … H … NH2]+ ·, in which an ammonium radical cation interacts with the formaldehyde dipole is also a very stable ion. It is generated by loss of CO from ionized methyl carbamate, H2N—C(=O)—OCH3 and the proposed mechanism involves a 1,4-H shift followed by intramolecular ‘dictation’ and CO extrusion. The [CH2=O … H … NH2]+ · product ions fragment exothermically, but via a barrier, to NH4+ · HCO… and to H3N—C(H)=O+ · H·. Metastable ions [CH3ONH2]+… dissociate, via a large barrier, to CH2=O + NH3+ + and to [CH2NH2]+ + OH· but not to CH2=O+ · + NH3. The former reaction proceeds via a 1,3-H shift after which dissociation takes place immediately. Loss of OH· proceeds formally via a 1,2-CH3 shift to produce excited [O—NH2—CH3]+ ·, which rearranges to excited [HO—NH2—CH2]+ · via a 1,3-H shift after which dissociation follows.
    Additional Material: 10 Ill.
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