Abstract

The photochemistry of nitrous acid (HONO), encompassing dissociation into OH and NO as well as the reverse association reaction, plays a pivotal role in atmospheric chemistry. Here, we report the direct observation of nitrosyl-O-hydroxide (HOON) in the photochemistry of HONO, employing matrix-isolation IR and UV-vis spectroscopy. Despite a barrier of approximately 30 kJ/mol, HOON undergoes spontaneous rearrangement to the more stable HONO isomer through quantum mechanical tunneling, with a half-life of 28 min at 4 K. Kinetic isotope effects and instanton theory calculations reveal that the tunneling process involves the concerted motion of the NO moiety (65.2%) and the hydrogen atom (32.3%). Our findings underscore the significance of HOON as a key intermediate in the photolytic dissociation-association cycle of HONO at low temperatures.

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