Price W D, Williams E R
Department of Chemistry, University of California, Berkeley, California 94720-1460.
J Phys Chem A. 1997 Nov 20;101(47):8844-52. doi: 10.1021/jp9722418.
Unimolecular rate constants for blackbody infrared radiative dissociation (BIRD) were calculated for the model protonated peptide (AlaGly)(n) (n = 2-32) using a variety of dissociation parameters. Combinations of dissociation threshold energies ranging from 0.8 to 1.7 eV and transition entropies corresponding to Arrhenius preexponential factors ranging from very "tight" (A(infinity) = 10(9.9) s(-1)) to "loose" (A(infinity) = 10(16.8) s(-1)) were selected to represent dissociation parameters within the experimental temperature range (300-520 K) and kinetic window (k(uni) = 0.001-0.20 s(-1)) typically used in the BIRD experiment. Arrhenius parameters were determined from the temperature dependence of these values and compared to those in the rapid energy exchange (REX) limit. In this limit, the internal energy of a population of ions is given by a Boltzmann distribution, and kinetics are the same as those in the traditional high-pressure limit. For a dissociation process to be in this limit, the rate of photon exchange between an ion and the vacuum chamber walls must be significantly greater than the dissociation rate. Kinetics rapidly approach the REX limit either as the molecular size or threshold dissociation energy increases or as the transition-state entropy or experimental temperature decreases. Under typical experimental conditions, peptide ions larger than 1.6 kDa should be in the REX limit. Smaller ions may also be in the REX limit depending on the value of the threshold dissociation energy and transition-state entropy. Either modeling or information about the dissociation mechanism must be known in order to confirm REX limit kinetics for these smaller ions. Three principal factors that lead to the size dependence of REX limit kinetics are identified. With increasing molecular size, rates of radiative absorption and emission increase, internal energy distributions become relatively narrower, and the microcanonical dissociation rate constants increase more slowly over the energy distribution of ions. Guidelines established here should make BIRD an even more reliable method to obtain information about dissociation energetics and mechanisms for intermediate size molecules.
使用多种解离参数,计算了模型质子化肽(AlaGly)(n)(n = 2 - 32)的黑体红外辐射解离(BIRD)单分子速率常数。选择了范围从0.8到1.7电子伏特的解离阈值能量与对应于从非常“紧密”(A(∞) = 10^(9.9) s^(-1))到“松散”(A(∞) = 10^(16.8) s^(-1))的阿仑尼乌斯指前因子的过渡熵的组合,以代表通常在BIRD实验中使用的实验温度范围(300 - 520 K)和动力学窗口(k(uni) = 0.001 - 0.20 s^(-1))内的解离参数。从这些值的温度依赖性确定阿仑尼乌斯参数,并与快速能量交换(REX)极限中的参数进行比较。在此极限下,离子群体的内能由玻尔兹曼分布给出,并且动力学与传统高压极限中的动力学相同。对于处于此极限的解离过程,离子与真空室壁之间的光子交换速率必须显著大于解离速率。随着分子大小或阈值解离能量增加,或者随着过渡态熵或实验温度降低,动力学迅速接近REX极限。在典型实验条件下,大于1.6 kDa的肽离子应处于REX极限。较小的离子也可能处于REX极限,这取决于阈值解离能量和过渡态熵的值。为了确认这些较小离子的REX极限动力学,必须知道解离机制的建模或相关信息。确定了导致REX极限动力学尺寸依赖性的三个主要因素。随着分子大小增加,辐射吸收和发射速率增加,内能分布变得相对更窄,并且微正则解离速率常数在离子的能量分布上增加得更慢。此处建立的指导原则应使BIRD成为获取有关中等大小分子解离能学和机制信息的更可靠方法。