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Water Catalysis of the Reaction of Methanol with OH Radical in the Atmosphere is Negligible
Author(s) -
Wu Junjun,
Gao Lu Gem,
Varga Zoltan,
Xu Xuefei,
Ren Wei,
Truhlar Donald G.
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
angewandte chemie
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 1521-3757
pISSN - 0044-8249
DOI - 10.1002/ange.202001065
Subject(s) - reaction rate constant , catalysis , chemistry , water vapor , methanol , density functional theory , thermodynamics , relative humidity , transition state theory , computational chemistry , kinetics , physics , quantum mechanics , organic chemistry
Faced with the contradictory results of two recent experimental studies [Jara‐Toro et al., Angew. Chem. Int. Ed . 2017 , 56 , 2166 and Chao et al., Angew. Chem. Int. Ed . 2019 , 58 , 5013] of the possible catalytic effect of water vapor on CH 3 OH + OH reaction, we report calculations that corroborate the conclusion made by Chao et al. and extend the rate constant evaluation down to 200 K. The rate constants of the CH 3 OH + OH reaction catalyzed by a water molecule are computed as functions of temperature and relative humidity using high‐level electronic structure and kinetics calculations. The Wuhan–Minnesota Scaling (WMS) method is used to provide accurate energetics to benchmark a density functional for direct dynamics. Both high‐frequency and low‐frequency anharmonicities are included. Variational and tunneling effects are treated by canonical variational transition state theory with multidimensional small‐curvature tunneling. And, most significantly, we include multistructural effects in the rate constant calculations. Our calculations show that the catalytic effect of water vapor is not observable at 200–400 K.