TY - JOUR
T1 - Identification of HOC•HC(O)H, HOCH2C•O, and HOCH2CH2O• Intermediates in the Reaction of H + Glycolaldehyde in Solid Para-Hydrogen and Its Implication to the Interstellar Formation of Complex Sugars
AU - Joshi, Prasad Ramesh
AU - Lee, Yuan Pern
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2024 The Authors. Published by American Chemical Society
PY - 2024/8/21
Y1 - 2024/8/21
N2 - Glycolaldehyde [HOCH2C(O)H, GA], the primitive sugar-like molecule detected in the interstellar medium (ISM), is a potential precursor for the synthesis of complex sugars. Despite its importance, the mechanism governing the formation of these higher-order sugars from GA under interstellar circumstances remains elusive. Radical intermediates HOCH2CH2O• (1), HOCH2C•HOH (2), HOCH2C•O (3), HOC•HC(O)H (4), and O•CH2C(O)H (5) derived from GA could be potential precursors for the formation of glyceraldehyde (aldose sugar), dihydroxyacetone (ketose sugar), and ethylene glycol (sugar alcohol) in dark regions of ISM. However, the spectral identification of these intermediates and their roles were little investigated. We conducted reactions involving H atoms and the Cis-cis conformer of GA (Cc-GA) in solid p-H2 at 3.2 K and identified IR spectra of radicals Cc-HOCH2C•O (3) and Cc-HOC•HC(O)H (4) produced from H abstraction as well as closed-shell HOCHCO (6) produced via consecutive H abstraction of GA. In addition, Cc-HOCH2CH2O• (1) and C•H2OH + H2CO (7) were produced through the H addition and the H-induced fragmentation channels, respectively. In darkness, when only H-tunneling reactions occurred, the formation of (3) was major and that of (1) was minor. In contrast, during IR irradiation to produce H atoms with higher energy, the formation of (4) and C•H2OH + H2CO (7) became important. We also successfully converted most Cc-GA to the second-lowest-energy conformer Trans-trans-GA (Tt-GA) by prolonged IR irradiation at 2827 nm to investigate H + Tt-GA; Tt-HOCH2C•O (3′), Tt-HOC•HC(O)H (4′), HOCHCO (6), Tt-HOCH2CH2O• (1′), and C•H2OH + H2CO (7) were observed. We discuss possible routes for the formation of higher-order sugars or related compounds involving (7), (1), (3), and (4), but neither (2), which was proposed previously, nor (5) plays a significant role in H + GA. Such previously unreported rich chemistry in the reaction of H + GA, with four channels of three distinct types, indicates the multiple roles that GA might play in astronomical chemistry.
AB - Glycolaldehyde [HOCH2C(O)H, GA], the primitive sugar-like molecule detected in the interstellar medium (ISM), is a potential precursor for the synthesis of complex sugars. Despite its importance, the mechanism governing the formation of these higher-order sugars from GA under interstellar circumstances remains elusive. Radical intermediates HOCH2CH2O• (1), HOCH2C•HOH (2), HOCH2C•O (3), HOC•HC(O)H (4), and O•CH2C(O)H (5) derived from GA could be potential precursors for the formation of glyceraldehyde (aldose sugar), dihydroxyacetone (ketose sugar), and ethylene glycol (sugar alcohol) in dark regions of ISM. However, the spectral identification of these intermediates and their roles were little investigated. We conducted reactions involving H atoms and the Cis-cis conformer of GA (Cc-GA) in solid p-H2 at 3.2 K and identified IR spectra of radicals Cc-HOCH2C•O (3) and Cc-HOC•HC(O)H (4) produced from H abstraction as well as closed-shell HOCHCO (6) produced via consecutive H abstraction of GA. In addition, Cc-HOCH2CH2O• (1) and C•H2OH + H2CO (7) were produced through the H addition and the H-induced fragmentation channels, respectively. In darkness, when only H-tunneling reactions occurred, the formation of (3) was major and that of (1) was minor. In contrast, during IR irradiation to produce H atoms with higher energy, the formation of (4) and C•H2OH + H2CO (7) became important. We also successfully converted most Cc-GA to the second-lowest-energy conformer Trans-trans-GA (Tt-GA) by prolonged IR irradiation at 2827 nm to investigate H + Tt-GA; Tt-HOCH2C•O (3′), Tt-HOC•HC(O)H (4′), HOCHCO (6), Tt-HOCH2CH2O• (1′), and C•H2OH + H2CO (7) were observed. We discuss possible routes for the formation of higher-order sugars or related compounds involving (7), (1), (3), and (4), but neither (2), which was proposed previously, nor (5) plays a significant role in H + GA. Such previously unreported rich chemistry in the reaction of H + GA, with four channels of three distinct types, indicates the multiple roles that GA might play in astronomical chemistry.
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85200870827&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1021/jacs.4c05896
DO - 10.1021/jacs.4c05896
M3 - Article
C2 - 39121440
AN - SCOPUS:85200870827
SN - 0002-7863
VL - 146
SP - 23306
EP - 23320
JO - Journal of the American Chemical Society
JF - Journal of the American Chemical Society
IS - 33
ER -