Literature DB >> 23674114

Ambient reaction kinetics of atmospheric oxygenated organics with the OH radical: a computational methodology study.

Jonas Elm1, Solvejg Jørgensen, Merete Bilde, Kurt V Mikkelsen.   

Abstract

The gas phase hydrogen abstraction reaction kinetics of short chained oxygenated hydrocarbons of atmospheric relevance has been studied using density functional theory, basis set extrapolation procedures, Møller-Plesset second order perturbation theory and Coupled-Cluster Singles Doubles. The rate constants for the reaction of the OH radical with nine different oxygenated compounds: CH3OH, CH3CH2OH, H2CO, CH3CHO, CH3COCH3, CH3OCH3, HCOOH, CH3COOH, HCOOCH3 with a total of 18 individual hydrogen abstraction reactions have been computationally determined and compared to experimental data. The performance of DFT in predicting the imaginary vibrational frequency of the nuclear motion at the transition state has been evaluated to assess tunnelling effects using Wigner, Bell and Eckart tunnelling corrections. Several different hybrid methodologies utilizing DFT/MP2 structures, vibrational frequencies and explicitly correlated Coupled Cluster single point energy corrections have been investigated to identify an approach for obtaining reliable reaction kinetics. Our investigation shows that CCSD(T)-F12a/VTZ-F12//BH&HLYP/aug-cc-pVTZ using a Bell or Eckart tunnelling correction yields rate constants within a factor of ~3 of experimental data and branching ratios within experimental uncertainty for the test set of short chained oxygenated compounds of atmospheric relevance.

Entities:  

Year:  2013        PMID: 23674114     DOI: 10.1039/c3cp50192b

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Phys Chem Chem Phys        ISSN: 1463-9076            Impact factor:   3.676


  2 in total

1.  Gas phase kinetics of the OH + CH3CH2OH reaction at temperatures of the interstellar medium (T = 21-107 K).

Authors:  A J Ocaña; S Blázquez; B Ballesteros; A Canosa; M Antiñolo; J Albaladejo; E Jiménez
Journal:  Phys Chem Chem Phys       Date:  2018-02-21       Impact factor: 3.676

2.  A possible unaccounted source of atmospheric sulfate formation: amine-promoted hydrolysis and non-radical oxidation of sulfur dioxide.

Authors:  Shixian Wang; Xiao Cheng Zeng; Hui Li; Joseph S Francisco
Journal:  Chem Sci       Date:  2020-01-10       Impact factor: 9.825

  2 in total

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