Abstract

Molecular ions obtained from acetophenone have been observed to undergo proton transfer reactions in competition with unimolecular blackbody dissociation in a Fourier transform ion cyclotron resonance spectrometer provided with an in situ high temperature blackbody source. The ionizing energy dependence of these two processes and generation of the enol molecular ion by fragmentation of butyrophenone reveal that the keto ion undergoes blackbody dissociation exclusively while the enol ion promotes fast proton transfer reactions and undergoes very slow blackbody induced dissociation. Experiments with labeled acetophenone either on the methyl group or on the ring reveal that the enol ions can transfer both H+ and D+ suggesting that the mechanism responsible for the tautomerization process of these radical cations may involve scrambling of the methyl and ring hydrogens, or more than one mechanism. Theoretical calculations at the B3LYP level predict that the most favorable pathway for unimolecular isomerization of the keto ion involves initial migration of an ortho hydrogen to the carbonyl. The subsequent rearrangement to the enol form is calculated to require enough internal energy that would allow hydrogen walk around the benzene ring in agreement with the experimental results. The possibility that isomerization may also occur by a direct 1,3-hydrogen migration is also explored in terms of possible excited electronic states of the ion.

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