Trapping intermediates of the NO2 hydrolysis reaction on ice.
Abstract
Using molecular beam methods, a mixture of stable NO2 and O2NNO2 with a considerable relative abundance of t-ONONO2, a potential heterogeneous hydrolysis reaction intermediate, was prepared by heating the quasi-effusive molecular beam nozzle to 600 K. The chemical speciation of hot nitrogen dioxide vapours was established using reflection-absorption IR spectroscopy (RAIRS) at very high (i.e., 1:1000) dilution by exploiting selective enhancement in absorbance features due to electric field standing waves (EFSW). Mode-selective shifts in the NO stretching vibrational frequencies of these species are observed upon their adsorption to the surface of amorphous solid water (ASW) at 40 K compared to their value in a crystalline solid argon matrix. Their sensitivities to hydration were assessed by computational chemistry methods using clusters of up to ten water molecules. This revealed that the shifts in the vibrational frequency of the terminal N=O stretching mode and of the asymmetric ONO stretching mode of the terminal -NO2 group of t-ONONO2 upon adsorption onto the surface of ASW signal that its ON-ONO2 bond is significantly polarized. Upon thermal annealing of the sample to 130 K, spectral signatures attributed to adsorbed nitrate anions can be observed suggesting that the activation barrier to heterogenous hydrolysis of the O=N+·-ONO2 zwitterionic reaction intermediate is sufficiently small to be overcome at cryogenic temperatures.
- This article is part of the themed collection: Atmospheric chemistry in cold environments