Abstract

The kinetics of the reactions of OH with acetic acid, acetic acid-d3 and acetic acid-d4 were studied from 2 to 5 Torr and 263-373 K using a discharge flow system with resonance fluorescence detection of the OH radical. The measured rate constants at 300 K for the reaction of OH with acetic acid and acetic acid-d4 (CD3C(O)OD) were (7.42+/-0.12)x10(-13) and (1.09+/-0.18)x10(-13) cm3 molecule-1 s-1 respectively, and the rate constant for the reaction of OH with acetic acid-d3 (CD3C(O)OH) was (7.79+/-0.16)x10(-13) cm3 molecule-1 s-1. These results suggest that the primary mechanism for this reaction involves abstraction of the acidic hydrogen. Theoretical calculations of the kinetic isotope effect as a function of temperature are in good agreement with the experimental measurements using a mechanism involving the abstraction of the acidic hydrogen through a hydrogen-bonded complex. The rate constants for the OH+acetic acid and OH+acetic acid-d4 reactions display a negative temperature dependence described by the Arrhenius equations kH(T)=(2.52+/-1.22)x10(-14) exp((1010+/-150)/T) and kD(T)=(4.62+/-1.33)x10(-16) exp((1640+/-160)/T) cm3 molecule-1 s-1 for acetic acid and acetic acid-d4, respectively, consistent with recent measurements that suggest that the lifetime of acetic acid at the low temperatures of the upper troposphere is shorter than previously believed.

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