By mixing primary and secondary alcohols with carboxylic acids just before the supersonic expansion within pulsed Fourier transform microwave experiments, only the rotational spectrum of the ester has been observed. However, when formic acid was mixed with tertiary alcohols, adducts have been formed and their rotational spectra have been easily measured. Quantum mechanical calculations have been performed to interpret the experimental evidence. In the present study esterification takes place without catalyst.To attain a satisfactory conversion a catalyst is generally needed, and yet the employment of one of the reactants in excess is necessary. [2] We discovered a very simple method to obtain esters from a gas phase 1:1 mixture of carboxylic acids and primary and secondary alcohols without need of catalyst. The details are reported below.Several molecular complexes involving carboxylic acids [3][4][5][6][7][8][9][10][11][12] have been investigated by rotational spectroscopy, in order to understand the nature of their non-covalent interactions and to have information on their internal dynamics and on their conformational equilibria. Most attention has been paid to the complexes of carboxylic acids, mainly to their dimers [3] and to their adducts with water. However, no MW studies of complexes between carboxylic acids and alcohols are reported. For this reason, we thought to investigate the prototype of this kind of complex, that is formic acid-methyl alcohol. Unexpectedly, we were not able to assign its rotational spectrum. Such a failure could be due, among to other reasons, to the complications related to the low V 3 barrier underlying the barrier to internal rotation of the methyl group, as well to the inversion of the methyl group from above to below the formic acid plane. In order to understand what was going on, we decided to start the investigation of the adducts carboxylic acids-alcohols from the adduct formic acid with a series of primary, secondary and tertiary alcohols. In details, we made supersonic expansions, with ca. 1% of carboxylic acid and 1% of alcohol in He for the following combinations: HCOOH-CH 3 OH, HCOOH-C 2 H 5 OH, HCOOH-(CH 3 ) 2 CHOH and HCOOH-(CH 3 ) 3 COH, that is formic acid mixed with methyl alcohol and with primary, secondary and tertiary alcohols, respectively.In all cases but the last one, it was not possible to observe the spectra of the adducts, but strong rotational transitions that we discovered to belong to the esters. Then we replaced linear alcohols with cyclic alcohols, like cyclohexanol (secondary) and 1-methylcyclopropanol (tertiary). Again, for the secondary alcohol we could observe only the rotational spectrum of the ester, and for the tertiary alcohol only that of the adduct. Finally, we exploited the replacement of HCOOH with carboxylic acids with stronger (CF 3 COOH) and weaker (pivalic acid) acidity. In the first case we observed only the ester, while in the second case the experiment did not succeed, because pivalic acid was rapidly obstructing our nozzl...