Abstract

Tandem mass spectrometry was used to explore the trends in the unimolecular fragmentation of the ionized hydroxy-substituted polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons 1-naphthol, 9-hydroxyphenanthrene, and 1-hydroxypyrene. The main dissociation reactions across all ring systems were CO- and HCO-losses, with ionized 1-naphthol also losing H atoms. Both ionized 1-naphthol and 9-hydroxyphenanthrene displayed the sequential loss of C2H2 and C4H2 from the [M-HCO]+ ions, reminiscent of unsubstituted PAH ions. CO-loss is slightly favored for 1-naphthol and 9-hydroxyphenanthrene, at low collision energy, but less so for 1-hydroxypyrene. Reaction mechanisms for HCO- and CO-losses from 1-hydroxypyrene were derived from CCSD/6-31G(d)//B3-LYP/6-31G(d) calculations. The CO-loss mechanism is dominated by two transition states: TS-A governing a 1,3-H shift in the molecular ion and TS-C which governs a ring-closing step to form a five-member ring in the product ion. HCO-loss occurs over a much flatter potential energy surface with the intermediate being the product ion bound to the carbon atom of HCO. Imaging photoelectron photoion coincidence spectroscopy of 1-hydroxypyrene yielded threshold photon-energy resolved breakdown curves and time-of-flight distributions that were modeled with RRKM theory to give 0 K reaction energies for HCO- and CO-losses of 3.92 ± 0.05 and 2.91 ± 0.05 eV, respectively. The entropies of activation for the two channels were very different, 14 and 95 JK-1 mol-1, respectively, a result consistent with the calculated mechanisms. The threshold photoelectron spectrum yielded an IE value of 7.14 ± 0.01 eV for 1-hydroxypyrene.

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