Abstract

Structural aspects of proton-bound dimers composed of amino acids with aliphatic side chains are investigated using infrared multiple photon dissociation (IRMPD) spectroscopy and electronic structure calculations. Features in the IRMPD spectra in the 700-2,000 cm-1 range are due primarily to C=O stretching, NH2 bending, and COH bending. It was possible to distinguish between isomeric structures by comparing the experimental IRMPD spectra and those predicted using B3LYP/6-31+G(d,p). It was possible, based on the calculations and IRMPD spectra, to assign the experimental spectrum of the glycine proton-bound dimer to a structure which was slightly different from that assigned by previous spectroscopic investigations and in agreement with recent thermochemical studies. Since all proton-bound dimers studied here, composed of the different amino acids, have very similar spectra, it is expected that they also have very similar lowest-energy structures including the mixed alanine/glycine proton-bound dimer. In fact, the spectra are so similar that it would be very challenging to distinguish, for example, the glycine proton-bound dimer from the alanine or valine proton-bound dimers in the 700-2,000 cm-1 range. According to the calculated IR spectra it is shown that in the approximately 2,000-3,200 cm-1 range differentiating between different structures as well as different proton-bound dimers may be possible. This is due mainly to differences in the asymmetric stretch of the binding proton which is predicted to occur in this region.

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