2017
DOI: 10.1039/c6cp06941j
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A butterfly motion of formic acid and cyclobutanone in the 1 : 1 hydrogen bonded molecular cluster

Abstract: Upon supersonic expansion, formic acid and cyclobutanone (CBU) form a molecular cluster in which the two constituent molecules, linked by OHO and CHO hydrogen bonds, undergo a rapid interconversion between two equivalent forms. The tunneling motion takes place through the rupture and reformation of the C-HO hydrogen bond between the carbonyl oxygen of HCOOH and one of the two hydrogen atoms of the methylenic group adjacent to the cyclobutanone keto group. From the microwave spectra, tunneling energy splittings… Show more

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Cited by 16 publications
(15 citation statements)
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“…This splitting can be reproduced by a3Dmodel with abarrier of 2559 cm À1 (30.6 kJ mol À1 )aso btained from theoretical calculations.Carboxylic acids form considerably stable dimers,t hat are sufficiently abundant at experimental conditions in as upersonic jet expansion. An umber of molecular complexes involving carboxylic acids [1][2][3][4][5][6][7][8][9][10] have been investigated by rotational spectroscopy,t ou nderstand the nature of their non-covalent interactions and to have information on their internal dynamics and on their conformational equilibria. Much attention has been paid to the complexes of carboxylic acids,m ainly to their dimers [1] and to their adducts with water.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This splitting can be reproduced by a3Dmodel with abarrier of 2559 cm À1 (30.6 kJ mol À1 )aso btained from theoretical calculations.Carboxylic acids form considerably stable dimers,t hat are sufficiently abundant at experimental conditions in as upersonic jet expansion. An umber of molecular complexes involving carboxylic acids [1][2][3][4][5][6][7][8][9][10] have been investigated by rotational spectroscopy,t ou nderstand the nature of their non-covalent interactions and to have information on their internal dynamics and on their conformational equilibria. Much attention has been paid to the complexes of carboxylic acids,m ainly to their dimers [1] and to their adducts with water.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Several molecular complexes involving carboxylic acids [3][4][5][6][7][8][9][10][11][12] have been investigated by rotational spectroscopy 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.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…[4] Plenty of data have been obtained on the dimers,c oncerning proton tunneling, [3a] the Ubbelohde effect, [3b] and conformational equilibria. [3c] HCOOH (FA) is the prototype of the carboxylic acids family and for this reason it is involved in most of the investigations of carboxylic acids with molecules containing other functional groups,s uch as its adducts with H 2 O, [4a] N(CH 3 ) 3 , [5] anhydrides, [6] thes implest aldehyde (CH 2 O), [7] the simplest amide (CH(CO)NH 2 ), [8] ethers (dimethylether), [9] ketones (cyclobutanone), [10] esters (isopropylformate), [11] and azines (pyridine). [12] However,n oM Ws tudies of complexes between carboxylic acids and alcohols are reported.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Several molecular complexes involving carboxylic acids have been investigated by rotational spectroscopy 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 and to their adducts with water .…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…HCOOH (FA) is the prototype of the carboxylic acids family and for this reason it is involved in most of the investigations of carboxylic acids with molecules containing other functional groups, such as its adducts with H 2 O, N(CH 3 ) 3 , anhydrides, the simplest aldehyde (CH 2 O), the simplest amide (CH(CO)NH 2 ), ethers (dimethylether), ketones (cyclobutanone), esters (isopropylformate), and azines (pyridine) …”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%