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Reactivity of Undissociated Molecular Nitric Acid at the Air–Water Interface
Author(s) -
Josep M. Anglada,
Marilia T. C. MartinsCosta,
Joseph S. Francisco,
Manuel F. RuizLópez
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
journal of the american chemical society
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 7.115
H-Index - 612
eISSN - 1520-5126
pISSN - 0002-7863
DOI - 10.1021/jacs.0c11841
Subject(s) - chemistry , nitric acid , dissociation (chemistry) , molecular dynamics , photodissociation , reactivity (psychology) , molecule , acid dissociation constant , chemical physics , computational chemistry , aqueous solution , photochemistry , inorganic chemistry , organic chemistry , medicine , alternative medicine , pathology
Recent experiments and theoretical calculations have shown that HNO 3 may exist in molecular form in aqueous environments, where in principle one would expect this strong acid to be completely dissociated. Much effort has been devoted to understanding this fact, which has huge environmental relevance since nitric acid is a component of acid rain and also contributes to renoxification processes in the atmosphere. Although the importance of heterogeneous processes such as oxidation and photolysis have been evidenced by experiments, most theoretical studies on hydrated molecular HNO 3 have focused on the acid dissociation mechanism. In the present work, we carry out calculations at various levels of theory to obtain insight into the properties of molecular nitric acid at the surface of liquid water (the air-water interface). Through multi-nanosecond combined quantum-classical molecular dynamics simulations, we analyze the interface affinity of nitric acid and provide an order of magnitude for its lifetime with regard to acid dissociation, which is close to the value deduced using thermodynamic data in the literature (∼0.3 ns). Moreover, we study the electronic absorption spectrum and calculate the rate constant for the photolytic process HNO 3 + h ν → NO 2 + OH, leading to 2 × 10 -6 s -1 , about twice the value in the gas phase. Finally, we describe the reaction HNO 3 + OH → NO 3 + H 2 O using a cluster model containing 21 water molecules with the help of high-level ab initio calculations. A large number of reaction paths are explored, and our study leads to the conclusion that the most favorable mechanism involves the formation of a pre-reactive complex (HNO 3 )(OH) from which product are obtained through a coupled proton-electron transfer mechanism that has a free-energy barrier of 6.65 kcal·mol -1 . Kinetic calculations predict a rate constant increase by ∼4 orders of magnitude relative to the gas phase, and we conclude that at the air-water interface, a lower limit for the rate constant is k = 1.2 × 10 -9 cm 3 ·molecule -1 ·s -1 . The atmospheric significance of all these results is discussed.

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