Journal of Physical Chemistry A, Vol.122, No.51, 9738-9754, 2018
Roaming-like Mechanism for Dehydration of Diol Radicals
Diol radicals (DRs) are important intermediates in biocatalysis, atmospheric chemistry, and biomass combustion. They are particularly generated from photolysis of halogenated diols and addition of hydroxyl radical to a double bond of unsaturated alcohols, such as lignols. The energized DRs further isomerize/decompose to form products, including water. Aqueous-phase dehydration in radiolytic and biomimetic systems typically occurs at low temperatures, with or without catalysis, whereas the gas-phase dehydration is usually considered energetically unfavorable. In the present study, we propose a new low-energy, roaming-like mechanism based on a detailed dispersion-corrected DFT and ab initio level analysis of the gas-phase dehydration of DRs obtained from the combination of OH radicals with allyl alcohol (AA, CH2=CHCH2OH)-the simplest relevant model of the unsaturated alcohols. The roaming pathways involve a nearly dissociated OH-group, which subsequently abstracts an H atom of the remaining fragment to form water and [C3H5O] radical via a transition state (TS) with energy close to the C-O bond fission asymptote. Two types of roaming-like first-order saddle points (SP) are identified for unimolecular dehydration of 1,2- and 1,3-DR radical adducts involving either both hydroxyl groups of diol radicals to generate an oxygen-centered radical, or beta-OH group and a skeletal alpha-hydrogen atom of the 1,2-DR to form a resonantly stabilized hydroxyallyl radical. Two higher energy conventional (tight) transition states, along with the pathways to 1,2-OH-migration, as well as direct H-abstraction, are also identified and analyzed. Most of the traditional density functional theory methods that have been successfully employed in the literature to locate so-far-known roaming SPs were also able to identify the new mechanism, in accord with dispersion-corrected double hybrid B2PLYP-D3(BJ) and mPW2PLYPD methods involving MP2-correlation corrections. However, the MP2 method itself failed to locate any of them, which seems to be typical for MP2 method for loose TS structures, confirmed here for a flat region of PES connecting direct and roaming saddle points. However, MP2 method correctly locates an identical roaming SP for a larger p-coumaryl alcohol model involving hydroxyphenyl substituent at C gamma atom of AA. Two types of interfragmental interactions are identified that stabilize the roaming SPs: (a) H-bonding of the leaving OH radical either with the H atom of the remaining OH group, or with pi-cloud of the double bond; (b) direct interaction of pi-electrons with the lone-pair electrons of the heteroatom in the leaving OH group through the TS-ring. The alternative TSs are qualitatively characterized by "collinearity" angle of the OH radical attack on the O-H/C-H bonds of the substrate in abstraction-like O-H-O geometry, attributed to the improved orbital overlaps. The proposed mechanism presents broader implications to signify, particularly, a larger role in atmospheric and combustion processes, especially biomass pyrolysis.