Abstract
The formation and fragmentation of negatively charged 2-hydroxyethylhydrazinium nitrate ([HOCH2CH2NH2NH2]+NO3-, HEHN) ionic liquid clusters were examined using a guided-ion beam tandem mass spectrometer furnished with collision-induced dissociation of selected ions with Xe atoms. Measurements included the compositions of cluster ions formed in the ionization source, and the dissociation products, cross sections, and 0 K threshold energies for individually selected cluster ions. To identify the structures of the main cluster ion series [(HEHN)n(HNO3)0-1NO3]- formed, molecular dynamics simulations were employed to create initial geometry guesses, followed by optimization at the ωB97XD/6-31+G(d,p) level of theory, from which global minimum structures were identified for reaction thermodynamics analyses. A comparison was made between the cluster formation and fragmentation in the negatively charged 2-hydroxyethylhydrazinium nitrate with those in the positive mode (reported by W. Zhou et al., Phys. Chem. Chem. Phys., 2023, 25, 17370). In both modes, the cluster ions were predominantly composed of m/z below 350; loss of a neutral 2-hydroxyethylhydrazinium nitrate ion pair represents the most important cluster fragmentation pathway, followed by intra-ion pair proton transfer-mediated 2-hydroxyethylhydrazine and HNO3 elimination; and all clusters started to dissociate at threshold energies less than 1.5 eV. The overwhelming similarities in the formation and fragmentation chemistry of positively vs. negatively charged 2-hydroxyethylhydrazinium nitrate clusters may be attributed to their inherent ionic nature and high electric conductivities.
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