Issue 89, 2017, Issue in Progress

Atmospheric chemistry of CH3O: its unimolecular reaction and reactions with H2O, NH3, and HF

Abstract

We have investigated the hydrogen atom transfer processes of CH3O to CH2OH without catalyst and with water, ammonia, and hydrofluoric acid as catalysts using ab initio methods, density functional theory (DFT) methods, and canonical variational transition state theory with small curvature tunneling (CVT/SCT). Herein, we have performed the benchmark barrier heights of the title reactions using W3X-L//CCSD(T)-F12a/VDZ-F12 methods. We have also performed the calculations of the combination of MPW-type, PBE-type exchange, M05-type, M06-type functional, and composite theoretical model chemistry methods such as CBS-QB3 and G4. We found that the M05-2X/aug-cc-pVTZ, mPW2PLYP/MG3S, M05-2X/aug-cc-pVTZ, and M06-2X/MG3S methods are performed better in different functionals with the unsigned errors (UEs) of 0.34, 0.02, 0.05, and 0.75 kcal mol−1 for its unimolecular reaction and reactions with H2O, NH3, and HF, respectively. The calculated results show that NH3 exerts the strongest catalytic role in the isomerization reaction of CH3O to CH2OH, compared with H2O and HF. In addition, the calculated rate constants show that the effect of tunneling increases the rate constant of the unimolecular reaction of CH3O by 102–1012 times in the temperature range of 210–350 K. Moreover, the variational effects of the transition state are obvious in CH3O + NH3. The calculated results also show that the direct unimolecular reaction of CH3O to CH2OH is dominant in the sink of CH3O, compared with the CH3O + H2SO4, CH3O + HCOOH, CH3O + H2O, CH3O + NH3, and CH3O + HF reactions in the atmosphere. The present results provide a new insight into catalysts that not only affect energy barriers, but have influences on tunneling and variational effects of transition states. The present findings should have broad implications in computational chemistry and atmospheric chemistry.

Graphical abstract: Atmospheric chemistry of CH3O: its unimolecular reaction and reactions with H2O, NH3, and HF

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
19 Aug 2017
Accepted
06 Dec 2017
First published
13 Dec 2017
This article is Open Access
Creative Commons BY license

RSC Adv., 2017,7, 56211-56219

Atmospheric chemistry of CH3O: its unimolecular reaction and reactions with H2O, NH3, and HF

M. Wei, X. Tan, Z. Long and B. Long, RSC Adv., 2017, 7, 56211 DOI: 10.1039/C7RA09167B

This article is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 Unported Licence. You can use material from this article in other publications without requesting further permissions from the RSC, provided that the correct acknowledgement is given.

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