Cationic states are involved in long-range charge transfer in polypeptides, [1] an area of intense chemical interest. [2] While a number of theoretical and time-resolved studies have contributed to our mechanistic understanding of this problem, [1] there is currently little spectroscopic information available for cationic amides. [3,4] Basic questions regard the preference for cis or trans conformations and barrier heights for interconversion. Here we present initial results that indicate that zero electron kinetic energy (ZEKE) spectroscopy, [5,6] a highresolution variant of photoelectron spectroscopy, may represent a powerful technique for obtaining vibrationally resolved spectra of cationic amides and model peptides. Spectra are presented for both the cis and trans isomers of formanilide, an aromatic molecule with an amide side chain. The aromatic group provides a convenient chromophore, while significant charge delocalization occurs from the aromatic ring to the functional group in the cation, so that formanilide is a useful model system for studying the properties of cationic amides.Local-minimum geometric structures of the neutral (S 0 ) and cationic (D 0 ) isomers of formanilide obtained from MP2(fc)/ 6-31G* ab initio calculations are presented in Figure 1. [7] For trans-formanilide, the calculations predict that the molecule Figure 1. Optimized structures of the neutral (S 0 ) and cationic (D 0 ) isomers of formanilide at the MP2(fc)/6-31G* level of theory illustrating the ionization-induced geometry changes. Total energies are given relative to the energy of the S 0 state of trans-formanilide (À 399.693829 Hartree).[9] More recently, aerobic intramolecular oxidative amination has been achieved with a [Pd(OAc) 2 ]/O 2 /DMSO catalyst system that lacks a cocatalyst: a) R.