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Issue 9, 2011
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Ground-state proton-transfer dynamics governed by configurational optimization

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Abstract

The ground-state proton transfer (GSPT) of 7-hydroxyquinoline along a hydrogen-bonded alcohol chain has been investigated in n-alkanes using time-resolved transient-absorption spectroscopy with variation of alcohols, media, isotopes, and temperatures. As a 7-hydroxyquinoline molecule associates with two alcohol molecules viahydrogen bonding to form a cyclic complex in a nonpolar aprotic medium, the intrinsic GSPT dynamics of the cyclic complex in a n-alkane has been observed directly without being interfered with by solvent association to form the cyclic complex. GSPT occurs concertedly without accumulating any reaction intermediate and yet asymmetrically with a rate-determining tunneling process. Both the rate constant and the kinetic isotope effect of GSPT increase rapidly with the proton-donating ability of the alcohol but decrease greatly with the molecular size of the alcohol. The reorganization of the hydrogen-bond bridge to form an optimal precursor configuration for efficient proton tunneling takes place prior to intrinsic GSPT, and configurational optimization becomes more important as the molecular size of the alcohol increases. Consequently, the larger contribution of configurational optimization to GSPT leads to the weaker asymmetric character of GSPT.

Graphical abstract: Ground-state proton-transfer dynamics governed by configurational optimization

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Publication details

The article was received on 30 Sep 2010, accepted on 25 Nov 2010 and first published on 20 Dec 2010


Article type: Paper
DOI: 10.1039/C0CP01977A
Citation: Phys. Chem. Chem. Phys., 2011,13, 3730-3736
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    Ground-state proton-transfer dynamics governed by configurational optimization

    S. Park, Y. Lee and D. Jang, Phys. Chem. Chem. Phys., 2011, 13, 3730
    DOI: 10.1039/C0CP01977A

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