RESUMO
In this work an experimental and theoretical study on the formation of HSO2+ ion from the SO2â + +CH4 and SO2â + +H2 O ion-molecule reactions at different temperatures is reported. Tunable synchrotron radiation was used to produce the SO2â + ion in excited ro-vibrational levels of the ionic ground state X2 A1 and mass spectrometry was employed to identify the product ions. Calculations in the frame of the density functional theory and variational transition state theory were combined to explore the dynamics of the reactions. The experimental results show that HSO2+ is the only product in both reactions. Its yield decreases monotonically with photon energy in the SO2â + +H2 O reaction, while it decreases at first and then increases in the SO2â + +CH4 reaction. Theory confirms this trend by calculating the rate constants at different temperatures and explains the results by means of the polar, spin and charge effects as well as structural reorganization occurring in the reaction coordinate. The dynamic behavior observed in these two reactions is of general and fundamental interest. It can also provide some insights on the role of these reactions in astrochemistry as well as in their use as models for bond-activation reactions.
RESUMO
The chemical physics of halomethanes is an important and challenging topic in several areas of chemistry in particular in the chemistry of the atmosphere. Among the class of halomethanes, the diiodomethane molecule has attracted some interest in the last years, but despite this, the information on its radical cation [CH2I2](â +) is still limited. In this work, we measured and calculated the appearance energy (AE) of the ionic fragments I2(â +) and CH2(â +) and correlated the different fragmentation channels to the electronic states of the cation via photoelectron-photoion coincidence (PEPICO) experiments. In the case of the CH2/I2(â +) channel, the experimentally determined AE is in excellent agreement with the adiabatic theoretical value while a discrepancy is observed for the CH2(â +)/I2 channel. This discrepancy can be understood accounting for a fragmentation involving the formation of two I atoms (CH2(â +)/2I channel), which, as explained by time dependent density functional theory (TD-DFT) calculations, occurs when [CH2I2](â +) excited states are involved.