Stereoselectivity in Atmospheric Autoxidation

J Phys Chem Lett. 2019 Oct 17;10(20):6260-6266. doi: 10.1021/acs.jpclett.9b01972. Epub 2019 Oct 3.

Abstract

We show that the diastereomers of hydroxy peroxy radicals formed from OH and O2 addition to C2 and C3, respectively, of crotonaldehyde (CH3CHCHCHO) undergo gas-phase unimolecular aldehydic hydrogen shift (H-shift) chemistry with rate coefficients that differ by an order of magnitude. The stereospecificity observed here for crotonaldehyde is general and will lead to a significant diastereomeric-specific chemistry in the atmosphere. This enhancement of specific stereoisomers by stereoselective gas-phase reactions could have widespread implications given the ubiquity of chirality in nature. The H-shift rate coefficients calculated using multiconformer transition state theory (MC-TST) agree with those determined experimentally using stereoisomer-specific gas-chromatography chemical ionization mass spectroscopy (GC-CIMS) measurements.