2018 AIChE Annual Meeting
(732g) Kinetics and Mechanism of Aspartic Acid Adsorption and Its Explosive Decomposition on Cu(100)
Authors
Karagoz, B. - Presenter, Carnegie Mellon University
Reinicker, A., Carnegie Mellon University
Gellman, A. J., Carnegie Mellon University
Amino acids are chiral molecules and a popular choice for studies of enantioselective surface chemistry. In this work, we use isotopically labeled aspartic acid (Asp, HO2CCH(NH2)CH2CO2H) on a Cu(100) single crystal surface to understand its detailed decomposition mechanism and kinetics. X-ray photoemission spectroscopy (XPS) and temperature programmed reaction spectroscopy (TPRS) have enabled us to identify the products and the mechanism of L-Asp decomposition on Cu(100). XP spectra demonstrate that Asp adsorbed on Cu(100) surfaces is in bi-aspartate form (-O2CCH2CH(NH2)CO2-). Asp decomposes by a vacancy-mediated explosive surface reaction mechanism in which the reaction rate accelerates with increasing extent of reaction. Once initiated, the C3-C4 and C1-C2 bonds break sequentially to produce CO2. The remaining intermediate (C2H5N) decomposes to produce Nâ¡CCH3 and H2. This work advances our understanding of the Asp decomposition mechanism on Cu surfaces by probing the fate of the hydrogen atoms in the C2H5N intermediate generated by Asp decarboxylation.