Monomeric ZnOH has been studied for the first time using millimeter and microwave gas-phase spectroscopy. ZnOH is important in surface processes and at the active site of the enzyme carbonic anhydrase. In the millimeter-wave direct-absorption experiments, ZnOH was synthesized by reacting zinc vapor, produced in a Broida-type oven, with water. In the Fourier-transform microwave measurements, ZnOH was produced in a supersonic jet expansion of CH(3)OH and zinc vapor, created by laser ablation. Multiple rotational transitions of six ZnOH isotopologues in their X(2)A' ground states were measured over the frequency range of 22-482 GHz, and splittings due to fine and hyperfine structure were resolved. An asymmetric top pattern was observed in the spectra, showing that ZnOH is bent, indicative of covalent bonding. From these data, spectroscopic constants and an accurate structure were determined. The Zn-O bond length was found to be similar to that in carbonic anhydrase and other model enzyme systems.
The pure rotational spectrum of KSH (X(1)A') has been measured using millimeter-wave direct absorption and Fourier transform microwave (FTMW) techniques. This work is the first gas-phase experimental study of this molecule and includes spectroscopy of KSD as well. In the millimeter-wave system, KSH was synthesized in a DC discharge from a mixture of potassium vapor, H2S, and argon; a discharge-assisted laser ablation source, coupled with a supersonic jet expansion, was used to create the species in the FTMW instrument. Five and three rotational transitions in the range 3-57 GHz were recorded with the FTMW experiment for KSH and KSD, respectively, in the K(a) = 0 component; in these data, potassium quadrupole hyperfine structure was observed. Five to six transitions with K(a) = 0-5 were measured in the mm-wave region (260-300 GHz) for the two species. The presence of multiple asymmetry components in the mm-wave spectra indicates that KSH has a bent geometry, in analogy to other alkali hydrosulfides. The data were analyzed with an S-reduced asymmetric top Hamiltonian, and rotational, centrifugal distortion, and potassium electric quadrupole coupling constants were determined for both isotopolgues. The r0 geometry for KSH was calculated to be r(S-H) = 1.357(1) Å, r(K-S) = 2.806(1) Å, and θ(M-S-H) (°) = 95.0 (1). FTMW measurements were also carried out on LiSH and NaSH; metal electric quadrupole coupling constants were determined for comparison with KSH. In addition, ab initio computations of the structures and vibrational frequencies at the CCSD(T)/6-311++G(3df,2pd) and CCSD(T)/aug-cc-pVTZ levels of theory were performed for LiSH, NaSH, and KSH. Overall, experimental and computational data suggest that the metal-ligand bonding in KSH is a combination of electrostatic and covalent forces.
The first experimental structure of a monomeric organozinc halide, IZnCH3, has been measured using millimeter-wave direct absorption spectroscopy in the frequency range 256-293 GHz. IZnCH3 is a model compound for organozinc halides, widely used in cross-coupling reactions. The species was produced in the gas phase by reaction of zinc vapor with iodomethane in the presence of a dc discharge. IZnCH3 was identified on the basis of its pure rotational spectrum as well as those of the isotopically substituted species I(66)ZnCH3, I(64)Zn(13)CH3, and I(64)ZnCD3. IZnCH3 is unmistakably a symmetric top molecule (X̃(1)A1) belonging to the C3v point group, in agreement with DFT calculations, with the following experimentally determined structural parameters: rIZn = 2.4076(2) Å, rZnC = 1.9201(2) Å, rCH = 1.105(9) Å, and ∠H-C-H = 108.7(5)°. The basic methyl group geometry is not significantly altered in this molecule. Experimental observations suggest that IZnCH3 is synthesized in the gas phase by direct insertion of activated atomic zinc into the carbon-iodine bond of iodomethane.
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