Aa. Viggiano et al., REACTIONS OF MASS-SELECTED CLUSTER IONS IN A THERMAL BATH GAS, International reviews in physical chemistry, 17(2), 1998, pp. 147-184
Technological developments of fast-flow tubes that led to major advanc
es in the study of cluster ion reactions are reviewed, including the c
oupling of high-pressure cluster ion sources to flowing-afterglow and
selected-ion flow tube (SIFT) instruments. Several areas of cluster io
n chemistry that have been studied recently in our laboratory, using a
SIFT instrument with a supersonic expansion ion source, are reviewed.
Firstly the thermal destruction of cluster ions is highlighted by a d
iscussion of the competition between electron detachment and thermal d
issociation in hydrated electron clusters (H2O)(n)(-). Rates and activ
ation energies for the thermal destruction (dissociation plus detachme
nt) of these clusters are discussed. The reactivity of hydrated electr
on clusters with several neutral electron scavengers is also reviewed.
Secondly cluster ion chemistry related to trace neutral detection of
atmospheric species using chemical ionization mass spectrometry is dis
cussed. Recent rate measurements needed for chemical ionization detect
ion of SO2 and H2SO4 using CO3-(H2O)(n) ions are reviewed. Thirdly the
effects of solvation on nucleophilic displacement (S(N)2) reactions a
re highlighted by the reactions of CH3Br with OH-(H2O)(n), Cl-(H2O)(n)
and F-(H2O)(n). Our measurements show that rates of S(N)2 reactions d
ecrease with increasing hydration, and the reactions preferentially le
ad to unhydrated products, corroborating previous experimental and the
oretical studies. The cluster studies also demonstrate that, in the ab
sence of a fast S(N)2 reaction channel, other mechanisms such as assoc
iation and ligand switching can become important. In the reaction of C
l-(H2O)(n) with CH3Br, a reaction where ligand switching plays an impo
rtant role, the interesting thermal dissociation of Cl-(CH3Br) product
ions is discussed. Finally, the use of cluster reactivity studies to
resolve issues about the detailed nature of solvation, that is whether
the core ion is internally or externally solvated, is discussed. Size
-dependent rate constants for the reactions of X-(H2O)(n) (X = F, Cl,
Br or I) with Cl-2, and the reactions of OH-(H2O)(n) with CO2 and with
HBr were used to determine the closing of initial solvation shells.