Journal of Chemical Physics, Vol.116, No.23, 10164-10169, 2002
Formation of anion fragments from gas-phase glycine by low energy (0-15 eV) electron impact
We have measured the formation of anion fragments in gas phase glycine (H2NCH2COOH) via dissociative electron attachment (DEA) reactions in the 0-15 eV electron energy range, using a monochromatic electron beam and mass spectrometric detection of the negative ions. By far the most intense product observed is the closed shell glycine anion (H2NCH2COO)(-) which appears from a low-energy resonance with a peak located at 1.4 eV and a cross section in the range 10(-16) cm(2). The corresponding precursor ion can be characterized by electron attachment into the empty pi(*) orbital of the -COOH group as recently assigned from electron transmission experiments and ab initio self-consistent field calculations [Aflatooni, Hitt, Gallup, and Burrow, J. Chem. Phys. 115, 6489 (2001)]. This precursor state is also observed to decompose (with much lower intensity) yielding a negative ion fragment with 58 amu, which is attributed to anions of the stoichiometric composition H2C2O2-or H4C2NO-. A further prominent DEA peak is observed at 6 eV, which is likely associated with a core excited resonance, and leads to formation of at least six different negative ion fragment species with the following mass numbers: 16 amu (O-/NH2-), 17 amu (OH-), 26 amu (CN-), 28 amu (H2CN-), 45 amu (HCO2-), 56 amu (H2C2NO-).