The Unimolecular Chemistry of Methyl Chloroformate Ions and Neutrals: A Story of Near-Threshold Decomposition

J Am Soc Mass Spectrom. 2023 Dec 6;34(12):2831-2839. doi: 10.1021/jasms.3c00334. Epub 2023 Nov 26.

Abstract

The near-threshold dissociation of ionized and neutral methyl chloroformate (CH3COOCl, MCF) was explored with imaging photoelectron photoion coincidence spectroscopy. The threshold photoelectron spectrum (TPES) for MCF was acquired for the first time; the large geometry changes upon ionization of MCF result in a broad, poorly defined TPES. Franck-Condon simulations are consistent with an adiabatic ionization energy (IE) of 10.90 ± 0.05 eV. Ionized MCF dissociates by chlorine atom loss at a measured 0 K appearance energy (AE) of 11.30 ± 0.01 eV. Together with the above IE, this AE suggests a reaction barrier of 0.40 ± 0.05 eV, consistent with the SVECV-f12 computational result of 0.41 eV. At higher internal energies, the loss of CH3O becomes competitive due to its lower entropy of activation. Pyrolysis of neutral MCF formed the anticipated major products CH3Cl + CO2 (R1) and the minor products HCl + CO + CH2O (R2). The thermal decomposition products were identified by their photoion mass-selected threshold photoelectron spectrum (ms-TPES). Possible reaction pathways were explored computationally to confirm the dominant ones: R1 proceeds by a concerted Cl atom migration via a four-membered transition state in agreement with the mechanism proposed in the literature. R2 is a two-step reaction first yielding 2-oxiranone by HCl loss, which then decomposes to CH2O and CO. Kinetic modeling of the neutral decomposition could simulate the observed reactions only if the vibrational temperature of the MCF was assumed not to cool in the expansion.

Keywords: computational chemistry; imaging photoelectron photoion coincidence spectroscopy; kinetic modeling; methyl chloroformate; photoelectron spectroscopy; pyrolysis; reaction mechanisms.