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Effects of water, ammonia and formic acid on HO 2 + Cl reactions under atmospheric conditions: competition between a stepwise route and one elementary step.

Tianlei ZhangYongqi ZhangMingjie WenZhuo TangBo LongXiao-Hu YuCaibin ZhaoWenliang Wang
Published in: RSC advances (2019)
Quantum chemical calculations at M06-2X and CCSD(T) levels of theory have been performed to investigate the effects of H 2 O, NH 3 , and HCOOH on the HO 2 + Cl → HCl + O 2 reaction. The results show that catalyzed reactions with three catalysts could proceed through two different mechanisms, namely a stepwise route and one elementary step, where the former reaction is more favorable than the latter. Meanwhile, for the stepwise route, a single hydrogen atom transfer pathway in the presence of all catalysts has more advantages than the respective double hydrogen atom transfer pathway. Then, the relative impacts of catalysts under tropospheric conditions were investigated by considering the temperature dependence of the rate constants and the altitude dependence of catalyst concentrations. The calculated results show that at 0 km altitude, the HO 2 + Cl → HCl + O 2 reaction with catalysts, such as H 2 O, NH 3 , or HCOOH, cannot compete with the reaction without a catalyst, as the effective rate constant with a catalyst is smaller by 2-6 orders of magnitude than the naked reaction within the temperature range 280-320 K. The calculated results also show that at altitudes of 5, 10 and 15 km, the effective rate constant of the HCOOH-catalyzed reaction increases obviously with an increase in altitude. At 15 km altitude, its value is up to 9.63 × 10 -11 cm 3 per molecule per s, which is close to the corresponding value of the reaction without a catalyst, showing that the contribution of HCOOH to the HO 2 + Cl → HCl + O 2 reaction cannot be neglected at high altitudes. The new findings in this investigation are not only of great necessity and importance for elucidating the gas-phase reaction of HO 2 with Cl in the presence of acidic, neutral and basic catalysts, but are also of great interest for understanding the importance of other types of hydrogen abstraction in the atmosphere.
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