Journal of Physical Chemistry A, Vol.110, No.38, 11034-11045, 2006
Molecular structure, infrared spectrum, and photochemistry of squaric acid dimethyl ester in solid argon
Squaric acid dimethyl ester (C6O4H6; 3,4-dimethoxycyclobut-3-ene-1,2-dione; DCD) was studied by matrix isolation infrared spectroscopy and by density functional theory (B3LYP) and ab initio (MP2) calculations with the 6-31++G(d, p) and 6-311++G(d, p) basis sets. Three conformers of the compound were theoretically predicted. The two most stable conformers were identified in low-temperature argon matrixes and the energy gap between them was determined. The trans-trans conformer (C-2v) was found to be more stable than the cis-trans form (C-s) by 4.2 kJ mol(-1), in consonance with the theoretical predictions (MP2 calcd = 3.9 kJ mol(-1)). In situ broadband UV irradiation (lambda > 337 nm) of the matrix-isolated compound was found to induce the ring-opening reaction leading to production of the bisketene, 2,3-dimethoxybuta-1,3-diene-1,4-dione as well as the trans-trans -> cis-trans conformational isomerization. The latter phototransformation allowed separation of the infrared spectra of the two conformers initially trapped into a low-temperature matrix. Upon higher energy irradiation (lambda > 235 nm), the main observed photoproducts were CO and deltic acid dimethyl ester (C5O3H6; 2,3-dimethoxycycloprop-2-en-1-one), the latter being obtained in two different conformations (trans-trans and cis-trans). According to the experimental data, deltic acid dimethyl ester is produced by decarbonylation of the initially formed bisketene and not by direct CO extrusion from DCD.