Sulfuric acid is commonly known to be a strong acid and, by all counts, should readily donate its proton to formate, which has much higher proton affinity. This conventional wisdom is challenged in this work, where temperature-dependent negative ion photoelectron spectroscopy (NIPES) and theoretical studies demonstrate the existence of (HCOO?)(H2SO4) pair at the energy slightly below the conventional (HCOOH)(HSO4?) structure. Analysis of quantum-mechanical calculations indicates that large proton affinity barrier (~36 kcal/mol), favoring proton transfer to formate, is offset by the gain in inter-molecular interaction energy between HCOO? and H2SO4 through the formation of two strong hydrogen bonds. However, this stabilization comes with severe entropic penalty, requiring the two species in the precise align-ment. As a result, the population of (HCOO?)(H2SO4) drops significantly at higher temperatures, rendering (HCOOH)(HSO4?) to be the dominant species. This phe-nomenon is consistent with the NIPES data, which shows depletion in the spectra assigned to (HCOO?)(H2SO4), and has also been verified by ab initio molecular dynamics simulations.
Revised: December 15, 2017 |
Published: August 23, 2017
Citation
Hou G., X. Wang, and M. Valiev. 2017.Formation of (HCOO-)(H2SO4) Anion Clusters: Violation of Gas Phase Acidity Predictions.Journal of the American Chemical Society 139, no. 33:11321-11324.PNNL-SA-127350.doi:10.1021/jacs.7b05964