Gas-phase formic acid exists primarily as a cyclic dimer. The mechanism of dimerization has been traditionally
considered to be a synchronous process; however, recent experimental findings suggest a possible alternative
mechanism by which two formic acid monomers proceed through an acyclic dimer to the cyclic dimer in a
stepwise process. To investigate this newly proposed process of dimerization in formic acid, density functional
theory and second-order Møller-Plesset perturbation theory (MP2) have been used to optimize cis and trans
monomers of formic acid, the acyclic and cyclic dimers, and the acyclic and cyclic transition states between
minima. Single-point energies of the trans monomer, dimer minima, and transition states at the MP2/TZ2P+diff
optimized geometries were computed at the coupled-cluster level of theory including singles and doubles
with perturbatively applied triple excitations [CCSD(T)] with an aug¢-cc-pVTZ basis set to obtain an accurate
determination of energy barriers and dissociation energies. A counterpoise correction was performed to
determine an estimate of the basis set superposition error in computing relative energies. The explicitly
correlated MP2 method of Kutzelnigg and Klopper (MP2-R12) was used to provide an independent means
for obtaining the MP2 one-particle limit. The cyclic minimum is predicted to be 6.3 kcal/mol more stable
than the acyclic minimum, and the barrier to double proton transfer is 7.1 kcal/mol.
Revised: January 23, 2012 |
Published: November 1, 2003
Citation
Brinkman N.R., and G. Tschumper. 2003.An Alternative Mechanism for the Dimerization of Formic Acid.Journal of Physical Chemistry A 107.