Theoretical Spectrscopic Study of Two Ketones of Atmospheric Interest: Methyl Glyoxal (CH3COCHO) and Methyl Vinyl Ketone (CH3COCH=CH2)
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Show full item recordEditorial
American Chemical Society
Date
2022-09-30Referencia bibliográfica
J. Phys. Chem. A 2022, 126, 7230−7241. [https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.jpca.2c05653]
Sponsorship
European Commission 872081; National Plan for Science, Technology and Innovation (MAARIFAH), King Abdulaziz City for Science and Technology, Kingdom of Saudi Arabia 0061-00101-17-2; Spanish Government EIN2019-103072 PID2020112887GB-I00 PID2019-104002GB-C21; ERDF A Way of Making Europe European Union Next Generation EU/PRTR; CTI (CSIC); CESGA; Red Espanola de Computacion AECT-20202-0008 RES-AECT-2020-3-0011Abstract
Two ketones of atmospheric interest, methyl glyoxal and methyl vinyl ketone,
are studied using explicitly correlated coupled cluster theory and core−valence correlationconsistent
basis sets. The work focuses on the far-infrared region. At the employed level of
theory, the rotational constants can be determined to within a few megahertz of the
experimental data. Both molecules present two conformers, trans/cis and antiperiplanar (Ap)/
synperiplanar (Sp), respectively. trans-Methyl glyoxal and Ap-methyl vinyl ketone are the
preferred structures. cis-Methyl glyoxal is a secondary minimum of very low stability, which
justifies the unavailability of experimental data in this form. In methyl vinyl ketone, the two conformers are almost isoenergetic, but
the interconversion implies a relatively high torsional barrier of 1798 cm−1. A very low methyl torsional barrier was estimated for
trans-methyl glyoxal (V3 = 273.6 cm−1). Barriers of 429.6 and 380.7 cm−1 were computed for Ap- and Sp-methyl vinyl ketone.
Vibrational second-order perturbation theory was applied to determine the rovibrational parameters. The far-infrared region was
explored using a variational procedure of reduced dimensionality. For trans-methyl glyoxal, the ground vibrational state was
estimated to split by 0.067 cm−1, and the two low excited energy levels (1 0) and (0 1) were found to lie at 89.588 cm−1/88.683
cm−1 (A2/E) and 124.636 cm−1/123.785 cm−1 (A2/E). For Ap- and Sp-methyl vinyl ketone, the ground vibrational state splittings
were estimated to be 0.008 and 0.017 cm−1, respectively.