posted on 2020-02-06, 14:39authored bySandra
L. Blair, Allison E. Reed Harris, Benjamin N. Frandsen, Henrik G. Kjaergaard, Edouard Pangui, Mathieu Cazaunau, Jean-Francois Doussin, Veronica Vaida
The conformer-specific
reactivity of gas-phase pyruvic acid following
the S1(nπ*) ← S0 excitation at
λmax = 350 nm (290–380 nm) and the effect
of water are investigated for the two lowest energy conformers. Conformer-specific
gas-phase pyruvic acid photolysis rate constants and their respective
populations are measured by monitoring their distinct vibrational
OH-stretching frequencies. The geometry, relative energies, fundamental
vibrational frequencies, and electronic transitions of the pyruvic
acid conformers and their monohydrated complexes are calculated with
density functional theory and ab initio methods. Results from experiment
and theory show that the more stable conformer with an intramolecular
hydrogen bond dominates the gas-phase photolysis of pyruvic acid.
Water greatly affects the gas-phase pyruvic acid conformer population
and photochemistry through hydrogen bonding interactions. The addition
of water decreases the gas-phase relative population of the more stable
conformer and decreases the molecule’s gas-phase photolysis
rate constants. The theoretical results show that even a single water
molecule interrupts the intramolecular hydrogen bond, which is essential
for the efficient photodissociation of gas-phase pyruvic acid. Results
of this study suggest that the aqueous-phase photochemistry of pyruvic
acid proceeds through hydrogen-bonded conformers lacking an intramolecular
hydrogen bond.