4.6 Article

Alkali Metal Cations Bonding to Carboxylate Anions: Studies using Mass Spectrometry and Quantum Chemical Calculations

Journal

JOURNAL OF PHYSICAL CHEMISTRY A
Volume 124, Issue 22, Pages 4390-4399

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acs.jpca.9b11864

Keywords

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Funding

  1. EU through the European Regional Development Fund [TK141]
  2. Estonian Ministry of Education and Science [IUT20-15]
  3. Estonian Center of Excellence High-Technology Materials for Sustainable Development HIGHTECHMAT
  4. Estonian National Research and Development Infrastructure development program of measure 2.3 Promotion of development activities and innovation - Enterprise Estonia foundation [34]
  5. Mobilitas Postdoctoral Research grant [MJD327]
  6. Universite Cote d'Azur (Nice)

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Data on the gas-phase energetics of anion/cation interactions are relatively scarce. In this work, gas-phase alkali metal cation basicity (AMCB) scales were established for a series of 15 benzoate ions XC6H4COO- with Li+, Na+, K+, Rb+, and Cs+ on the basis of mass spectrometry experiments and high-level calculations. A wide range of electron-donating and electronwithdrawing substituents were included in the study. The thermochemical values were calculated by ab initio methodologies and extrapolated to the complete basis set limit. For each metal cation, the experimental relative cation basicity values of the anions were established quantitatively by applying the Cooks' kinetic method to the cation-bound heterodimers [(XC6H4COO-)M+(YC6H4COO-)](-), generated by electrospray ionization. The self-consistency of these AMCB scales was ascertained by multiple overlap of the individual relative basicities. In parallel, the proton gas-phase basicities (GBs) of the benzoate anions (gas-phase acidities of the respective benzoic acids) were calculated in order to compare the results of the theoretical method with known experimental GB values. The experimental and calculated GB values agree quite accurately (average absolute deviation = 3.2 kJ mol(-1)). The relative experimental AMCB scales and the absolute calculated AMCB scales are highly correlated, and the two sets agree by better than 4 kJ mol(-1). It is also demonstrated that the five series of calculated AMCBs are highly correlated with the calculated GB.

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