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1.
Chemphyschem ; 25(13): e202400207, 2024 Jul 02.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38837591

ABSTRACT

The contributions in this special theme collection, in honor to Prof. P. Villarreal, cover a broad variety of computational methodologies and experimental techniques, containing studies on gas phase, clusters and condensed phase systems.

2.
J Chem Phys ; 160(18)2024 May 14.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38726937

ABSTRACT

We present new results on the underlying guest-host interactions and spectral characterization of a CO2 molecule confined in the cages of the sI clathrate hydrate. Such types of porous solids raise computational challenges, as they are of practical interest as gas storage/capture materials. Accordingly, we have directed our efforts toward addressing their modeling in a proper manner, ensuring the quality of the input data and the efficiency of the computational approaches. The computational procedure for spectral simulations, within the multi-configurational time-dependent Hartree framework, involves the development of a fully coupled Hamiltonian, including an exact kinetic energy operator and a many-body representation of the potential, along with dipole moment surfaces, both obtained through neural network machine learning techniques. The resulting models were automatically trained and tested on extensive datasets generated by PW86PBE-XDM calculations, following the outcome of previous benchmark studies. Our simulations enable us to explore various aspects of the quantized dynamics upon confinement of CO2@D/T, such as constrained rotational-translational quantum motions and the averaged position/orientation of the CO2 guest in comparison to the experimental data available. Particularly notable are the distinct energy patterns observed in the computed spectra for the confined CO2 in the D and T cages, with a considerably high rotational-translational coupling in the CO2@T case. Leveraging reliable computations has proved instrumental, highlighting the sensitivity of the spectral features to the shape and strength of the potential interactions, with the explicit description of many-body contributions being significant.

3.
Phys Chem Chem Phys ; 26(8): 7060-7071, 2024 Feb 22.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38345626

ABSTRACT

One of the most fascinating discoveries in recent years, in the cold and low pressure regions of the universe, was the detection of ArH+ and HeH+ species. The identification of such noble gas-containing molecules in space is the key to understanding noble gas chemistry. In the present work, we discuss the possibility of [Ar2H]+ existence as a potentially detectable molecule in the interstellar medium, providing new data on possible astronomical pathways and energetics of this compound. As a first step, a data-driven approach is proposed to construct a full 3D machine-learning potential energy surface (ML-PES) via the reproducing kernel Hilbert space (RKHS) method. The training and testing data sets are generated from CCSD(T)/CBS[56] computations, while a validation protocol is introduced to ensure the quality of the potential. In turn, the resulting ML-PES is employed to compute vibrational levels and molecular spectroscopic constants for the cation. In this way, the most common isotopologue in ISM, [36Ar2H]+, was characterized for the first time, while simultaneously, comparisons with previously reported values available for [40Ar2H]+ are discussed. Our present data could serve as a benchmark for future studies on this system, as well as on higher-order cationic Ar-hydrides of astrophysical interest.

4.
Phys Chem Chem Phys ; 26(3): 2519-2528, 2024 Jan 17.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38170811

ABSTRACT

Clathrate hydrates have the ability to encapsulate atoms and molecules within their cavities, and thus they could be potentially large storage capacity materials. The present work studies the multiple cage occupancy effects in the recently discovered He@sII crystal. On the basis of previous theoretical and experimental findings, the stability of He(1/1)@sII, He(1/4)@sII and He(2/4)@sII crystals was analysed in terms of structural, mechanical and energetic properties. For this purpose, first-principles DFT/DFT-D computations were performed by using both semi-local and non-local functionals, not only to elucidate which configuration is the most energetically favoured, but also to scrutinize the relevance of the long-range dispersion interactions in these kinds of compounds. We have encountered that dispersion interactions play a fundamental role in describing the underlying interactions, and different tendencies were observed depending on the choice of the functional. We found that PW86PBE-XDM shows the best performance, while the non-local functionals tested here were not able to correctly account for them. The present results reveal that the most stable configuration is the one presenting singly occupied D cages and tetrahedrally occupied H cages (He(1/4)@sII) in line with the experimental observation.

5.
Molecules ; 28(23)2023 Dec 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38067621

ABSTRACT

In the realm of solid water hydrostructures, helium atoms have a tendency to occupy the interstitial spaces formed within the crystal lattice of ice structures. The primary objective of this study is to examine the stability of various ice crystals when influenced by the presence of He atoms. Presenting a first attempt at a detailed computational description of the whole energy components (guest-water, water-water, guest-guest) in the complete crystal unit cells contributes to enhancing the knowledge available about these relatively unexplored helium-water systems, which could potentially benefit future experiments. For this purpose, two different ice structures were considered: the previously established He@ice II system, and the predicted (but currently nonexistent) He@ice XVII system. One of the main features of these He-filled structures is the stability conferred by the weak van der Waals dispersion forces that occur between the host lattice and the guest atoms, in addition to the hydrogen bonds established among the water molecules. Hence, it is crucial to accurately describe these interactions. Therefore, the first part of this research is devoted examining the performance and accuracy of various semi-local and non-local DFT/DFT-D functionals, in comparison with previous experimental and/or high-level computational data. Once the best-performing DFT functional has been identified, the stability of these empty and He-filled structures, including different number of He atoms within the lattices, is analysed in terms of their structural (lattice deformation), mechanical (pressure compression effects) and energetic properties (binding and saturation energies). In this manner, the potential formation of these structures under zero temperature and pressure conditions can be evaluated, while their maximum storage capacity is also determined. The obtained results reveal that, despite the weak underlying interactions, the He encapsulation has a rather notable effect on both lattice parameters and energetics, and therefore, the guest-host interactions are far from being negligible. Besides, both ice crystals are predicted to remain stable when filled with He atoms, with ice XVII exhibiting a higher capacity for accommodating a larger number of guest atoms within its interstitial spaces.

6.
Chemphyschem ; 24(23): e202300570, 2023 Dec 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37723124

ABSTRACT

A water molecule confined inside the C70 fullerene was quantum-mechanically described using a computational approach within the MCTDH framework. Such procedure involves the development of a full-dimensional coupled hamiltonian, with an exact kinetic energy operator, including all rotational, translational and vibrational degrees of freedom of the endofullerene system. In turn, through an effective pairwise potential model, the ground and rotationally excited states of the encapsulated H2 O inside the C70 cage were calculated, and traced back to the isotropic case of the H2 O@C60 endofullerene in order to understand the nature and physical origin of the symmetry breaking observed experimentally in the latter system. Moreover, the computational scheme used here allows to study the quantization of the translational movement of the encapsulated water molecule inside the C70 fullerene, and to investigate the confinement effects in the vibrational energy levels of the H2 O@C70 system.

7.
Chemphyschem ; 24(20): e202300450, 2023 Oct 17.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37477047

ABSTRACT

The reactive collision between 36 Ar and the 36 ArH+ species has been investigated by means of quantum mechanical (QM), quasiclassical trajectories (QCT) and statistical quantum mechanical (SQM) approaches. Reaction probabilities, cross sections as a function of the energy and rate constants in terms of the temperature have been obtained. Cumulative distributions as a function of the collision time and the inspection of selected QCT corresponding to specific dynamical mechanisms have been analysed. Predictions by means of the SQM method are in good agreement with the QM results, thus supporting the complex-forming nature of the process.

8.
J Mol Graph Model ; 124: 108562, 2023 11.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37454411

ABSTRACT

Computational quantum chemistry has become a powerful tool with a wide range of possibilities to solve chemical-physical problems. As a result of this, the interest in the applications of computational quantum chemistry has expanded considerably, and has opened up novel research opportunities. In particular, those related to the characterization of heavy-atoms complexes, as most electronic structure calculations for such systems struggle with the problem posed by the large number of electrons present in them, and consequently, the introduction of relativistic effects. The present study performed an exhaustive assess to characterized the uncommon NgH+ (Ng = Kr, Xe, and Rn) hydride cations in order to provide accurate rovibrational data of their isotopes to assist in the laboratory characterization or even their astronomical detection. Scalar relativistic effects were included, and the ground and first electronically exited states potential curves were obtained from benchmark ab initio CCSD(T)/CBS and MRCI+Q electronic structure calculations. Next, such interaction potentials, correctly extended to long-range asymptotic regions, were employed in quantum bound state calculations and molecular spectroscopic constants were determined for the most abundance 84Kr, 132Xe, and 222Rn isotopes. Our results were discussed in comparison with available experimental and previous theoretical estimates, aiming to treat accuracy issues. The new sets provide reference data that could serve for spectroscopic characterization of such low abundance and high radioactive species.


Subject(s)
Electrons , Cations , Spectrum Analysis
9.
Phys Chem Chem Phys ; 25(25): 16844-16855, 2023 Jun 28.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37314248

ABSTRACT

One of the several possibilities offered by the interesting clathrate hydrates is the opportunity to encapsulate several atoms or molecules, in such a way that more efficient storage materials could be explored or new molecules that otherwise do not exist could be created. These types of applications are receiving growing attention from technologists and chemists, given the future positive implications that they entail. In this context, we investigated the multiple cage occupancy of helium clathrate hydrates, to establish stable novel hydrate structures or ones similar to those predicted previously by experimental and theoretical studies. To this purpose, we analyzed the feasibility of including an increased number of He atoms inside the small (D) and large (H) cages of the sII structure through first-principles properly assessed density functional approaches. On the one hand, we have computed energetic and structural properties, in which we examined the guest-host and guest-guest interactions in both individual and two-adjacent clathrate-like sII cages by means of binding and evaporation energies. On the other hand, we have carried out a thermodynamical analysis on the stability of such He-containing hydrostructures in terms of changes in enthalpy, ΔH, Gibbs free energy, ΔG, and entropy, ΔS, during their formation process at various temperature and pressure values. In this way, we have been able to make a comparison with experiments, reaffirming the ability of computational DFT approaches to describe such weak guest-host interactions. In principle, the most stable structure involves the encapsulation of one and four He atoms inside the D and H sII cages, respectively; however, more He atoms could be entrapped under lower temperature and/or higher pressure thermodynamic conditions. We foresee such accurate computational quantum chemistry approaches contributing to the current emerging machine-learning model development.

10.
J Comput Chem ; 44(17): 1587-1598, 2023 Jun 30.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37013410

ABSTRACT

We report new results on the translational-rotational (T-R) states of the CO2 molecule inside the sI clathrate-hydrate cages. We adopted the multiconfiguration time-dependent Hartree methodology to solve the nuclear molecular Hamiltonian, and to address issues on the T-R couplings. Motivated by experimental X-ray observations on the CO2 orientation in the D and T sI cages, we aim to evaluate the effect of the CO2 -water interaction on quantum dynamics. Thus, we first compared semiempirical and ab initio-based pair interaction model potentials against first-principles DFT-D calculations for ascertaining the importance of nonadditive many-body effects on such guest-host interactions. Our results reveal that the rotational and translational excited states quantum dynamics is remarkably different, with the pattern and density of states clearly affected by the underlying potential model. By analyzing the corresponding the probability density distributions of the calculated T-R eigenstates on both semiempirical and ab initio pair CO2 -water nanocage potentials, we have extracted information on the altered CO2 guest local structure, and we discussed it in connection with experimental data on the orientation of the CO2 molecule in the D and T sI clathrate cages available from neutron diffraction and 13 C solid-state NMR studies, as well as in comparison with previous molecular dynamics simulations. Our calculations provide a very sensitive test of the potential quality by predicting the low-lying T-R states and corresponding transitions for the encapsulated CO2 molecule. As such spectroscopic observables have not been measured so far, our results could trigger further detailed experimental and theoretical investigations leading to a quantitative description of the present guest-host interactions.

11.
J Phys Chem C Nanomater Interfaces ; 126(35): 14832-14842, 2022 Sep 08.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36110497

ABSTRACT

We performed first-principles computations to investigate the complex interplay of molecular interaction energies in determining the lattice structure and stability of CO2@sH clathrate hydrates. Density functional theory computations using periodic boundary conditions were employed to characterize energetics and the key structural properties of the sH clathrate crystal under pressure, such as equilibrium lattice volume and bulk modulus. The performance of exchange-correlation functionals together with recently developed dispersion-corrected schemes was evaluated in describing interactions in both short-range and long-range regions of the potential. Structural relaxations of the fully CO2-filled and empty sH unit cells yield crystal structure and lattice energies, while their compressibility parameters were derived by including the pressure dependencies. The present quantum chemistry computations suggest anisotropy in the compressibility of the sH clathrate hydrates, with the crystal being less compressible along the a-axis direction than along the c-axis one, in distinction from nearly isotropic sI and sII structures. The detailed results presented here give insight into the complex nature of the underlying guest-host interactions, checking earlier assumptions, providing critical tests, and improving estimates. Such entries may eventually lead to better predictions of thermodynamic properties and formation conditions, with a direct impact on emerging hydrate-based technologies.

12.
Phys Chem Chem Phys ; 24(24): 14964-14974, 2022 Jun 22.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35686995

ABSTRACT

We report the results of a detailed and accurate investigation focused on structures and energetics of poly-hydrated halides employing first-principles polarizable halide-water potentials to describe the underlying forces. Following a bottom-up data-driven potential approach, we initially looked into the classical behavior of higher-order X-(H2O)N clusters. We have located several low-lying energies, such as global and local minima, structures for each cluster, with various water molecules (up to N = 8) surrounding the halide anion (X- = F-, Cl-, Br-, I-), employing an evolutionary programming method. It is found that the F--water clusters exhibit different structural configurations than the heavier halides, however independently of the halide anion, all clusters show in general a selective growth with the anion preferring to be connected to the outer shell of the water molecule arrangements. In turn, path-integral molecular dynamics simulations are performed to incorporate explicitly nuclear quantum and thermal effects in describing the nature of halide ion microsolvation in such prototypical model systems. Our data reveal that at low finite temperatures, nuclear quantum effects affect certain structural properties, such as weakening hydrogen bonding between the halide anion and water molecules, with minor distortions in the water network beyond the first hydration shell, indicating local structure rearrangements. Such structural characteristics and the promising cluster size trends observed in the single-ion solvation energies motivated us to draw connections of small size cluster data to the limits of continuum bulk values, toward the investigation of the challenging computational modeling of bulk single ion hydration.

13.
Phys Chem Chem Phys ; 24(21): 13119-13129, 2022 Jun 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35587105

ABSTRACT

The dynamics of the formation of a specific clathrate hydrate as well as its thermodynamic transitions depend on the interactions between the trapped molecules and the host water lattice. The molecular-level understanding of the different underlying processes benefits not only the description of the properties of the system, but also allows the development of multiple technological applications such as gas storage, gas separation, energy transport, etc. In this work we investigate the stability of periodic crystalline structures, such as He@sI and He@sII clathrate hydrates by first-principles computations. We consider such host water networks interacting with a guest He atom using selected density functional theory approaches, in order to explore the effects on the encapsulation of a light atom in the sI/sII crystals, by deriving all energy components (guest-water, water-water, guest-guest). Structural properties and energies were first computed by structural relaxations of the He-filled and empty sI/sII unit cells, yielding lattice and compressibility parameters comparable to experimental and theoretical values available for those hydrates. According to the results obtained, the He enclathration in the sI/sII unit cells is a stabilizing process, and both He@sI and He@sII clathrates, considering single cage occupancy, are predicted to be stable whatever the XDM or D4 dispersion correction applied. Our results further reveal that despite the weak underlying interactions the He encapsulation has a rather notable effect on both lattice parameters and energetics, with the He@sII being the most energetically favorable in accord with recent experimental observations.

14.
Molecules ; 27(5)2022 Mar 02.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35268757

ABSTRACT

Dissolved ions in aqueous media are ubiquitous in many physicochemical processes, with a direct impact on research fields, such as chemistry, climate, biology, and industry. Ions play a crucial role in the structure of the surrounding network of water molecules as they can either weaken or strengthen it. Gaining a thorough understanding of the underlying forces from small clusters to bulk solutions is still challenging, which motivates further investigations. Through a systematic analysis of the interaction energies obtained from high-level electronic structure methodologies, we assessed various dispersion-corrected density functional approaches, as well as ab initio-based data-driven potential models for halide ion-water clusters. We introduced an active learning scheme to automate the generation of optimally weighted datasets, required for the development of efficient bottom-up anion-water models. Using an evolutionary programming procedure, we determined optimized and reference configurations for such polarizable and first-principles-based representation of the potentials, and we analyzed their structural characteristics and energetics in comparison with estimates from DF-MP2 and DFT+D quantum chemistry computations. Moreover, we presented new benchmark datasets, considering both equilibrium and non-equilibrium configurations of higher-order species with an increasing number of water molecules up to 54 for each F, Cl, Br, and I anions, and we proposed a validation protocol to cross-check methods and approaches. In this way, we aim to improve the predictive ability of future molecular computer simulations for determining the ongoing conflicting distribution of different ions in aqueous environments, as well as the transition from nanoscale clusters to macroscopic condensed phases.

15.
Chemphyschem ; 23(9): e202200034, 2022 May 04.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35289042

ABSTRACT

We explore the origin of the anomalous splitting of the 101 levels reported experimentally for the H2 O@C60 endofullerene, in order to give some insight about the physical interpretations of the symmetry breaking observed. We performed fully-coupled quantum computations within the multiconfiguration time-dependent Hartree approach employing a rigorous procedure to handle such computationally challenging problems. We introduce two competing physical models, and discuss the observed unconventional quantum patterns in terms of anisotropy in the interfullerene interactions, caused by the change in the off-center position of the encapsulated water molecules inside the cage or the uniaxial C60 -cage distortion, arising from noncovalent bonding upon water's encapsulation, or exohedral fullerene perturbations. Our results show that both scenarios could reproduce the experimentally observed rotational degeneracy pattern, although quantitative agreement with the available experimental rotational levels splitting value has been achieved by the model that considers an uniaxial elongation of the C60 -cage. Such finding supports that the observed symmetry breaking could be mainly caused by the distortion of the fullerene cage. However, as nuclear quantum treatments rely on the underlying interactions, a decisive conclusion hinges on the availability of their improved description, taken into account both endofullerene and exohedral environments, from forthcoming highly demanding electronic structure many-body interaction studies.

16.
Phys Chem Chem Phys ; 24(3): 1475-1485, 2022 Jan 19.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34935011

ABSTRACT

We have assessed the performance and accuracy of different wavefunction-based electronic structure methods, such as DFMP2 and domain-based local pair-natural orbital (DLPNO-CCSD(T)), as well as a variety of density functional theory (DFT) approaches on He@(H2O)N cage systems. We have selected representative clathrate-like structures corresponding to the building blocks present in each of the sI, sII and sH natural gas clathrate hydrates, and we have carefully studied the interaction between a He atom with each of their individual cages. We reported well-converged DFMP2 and DLPNO-CCSD(T) reference data, together with interaction and cohesive energies of four different density functionals (two GGA, revPBE and PW86PBE, and two hybrids, B3LYP and PBE0), including diverse dispersion correction schemes (D3(0), D3(BJ), D4 and XDM) for both He-filled and empty clathrate-like cages. After the analysis of the results, we came to the conclusion that the PW86PBE functional, with both XDM and D4 corrections, and the PBE0-D4 functional present reasonably adequate approaches to describe the guest-host noncovalent interactions that take place in such He clathrate hydrates. Taking into account that the He@sII is the only helium clathrate that scientists have been able to synthesize recently, we have performed a thermodynamic study on the individual 512 and 51264 cages present in the sII crystal. We determined the change in enthalpy, ΔH, and in Gibbs free energy, ΔG, at various temperatures and pressures, and we found out that in the range of experimental conditions the reactions associated with the encapsulation of the He atom inside the cages are exothermic and spontaneous. Finally, we highlighted the importance of an accurate description of the interaction in He@water mixtures, as a crucial component in construction of reliable data-driven models.

17.
J Chem Theory Comput ; 17(9): 5839-5848, 2021 Sep 14.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34420292

ABSTRACT

We introduce an efficient quantum fully coupled computational scheme within the multiconfiguration time-dependent Hartree (MCTDH) approach to handle the otherwise extremely costly computations of translational-rotational-vibrational states and energies of light-molecule endofullenes. Quantum calculations on energy levels are reported for a water molecule inside C60 fullerene by means of such a systematic approach that includes all nine degrees of freedom of H2O@C60 and does not consider restrictions above them. The potential energy operator is represented as a sum of natural potentials employing the n-mode expansion, along with the exact kinetic energy operator, by introducing a set of Radau internal coordinates for the H2O molecule. On the basis of the present rigorous computations, various aspects of the quantized intermolecular dynamics upon confinement of H2O@C60 are discussed, such as the rotational energy level splitting and the significant frequency shifts of the encapsulated water molecule vibrations. The impact of water encapsulation on quantum features is explored, and insights into the nature of the underlying forces are provided, highlighting the importance of a reliable first-principles description of the guest-host interactions.

18.
Front Chem ; 9: 664693, 2021.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34046396

ABSTRACT

Theoretical-computational studies together with recent astronomical observations have shown that under extreme conditions in the interstellar medium (ISM), complexes of noble gases may be formed. Such observations have generated a wide range of possibilities. In order to identify new species containing such atoms, the present study gathers spectroscopic data for noble gas hydride cations, NgH+ (Ng = He, Ne, Ar) from high-level ab initio quantum chemistry computations, aiming to contribute in understanding the chemical bonding and electron sharing in these systems. The interaction potentials are obtained from CCSD(T)/CBS and MRCI+Q calculations using large basis sets, and then employed to compute vibrational levels and molecular spectroscopic constants for all known stable isotopologues of ground state NgH+ cations. Comparisons with previously reported values available are discussed, indicating that the present data could serve as a benchmark for future studies on these systems and on higher-order cationic noble gas hydrides of astrophysical interest.

19.
J Chem Phys ; 154(4): 044301, 2021 Jan 28.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33514100

ABSTRACT

We performed first-principles computations to investigate guest-host/host-host effects on the encapsulation of the CO2 molecule in sII clathrate hydrates from finite-size clusters up to periodic 3D crystal lattice systems. Structural and energetic properties were first computed for the individual and first-neighbors clathrate-like sII cages, where highly accurate ab initio quantum chemical methods are available nowadays, allowing in this way the assessment of the density functional (DFT) theoretical approaches employed. The performance of exchange-correlation functionals together with recently developed dispersion-corrected schemes was evaluated in describing interactions in both short-range and long-range regions of the potential. On this basis, structural relaxations of the CO2-filled and empty sII unit cells yield lattice and compressibility parameters comparable to experimental and previous theoretical values available for sII hydrates. According to these data, the CO2 enclathration in the sII clathrate cages is a stabilizing process, either by considering both guest-host and host-host interactions in the complete unit cell or only the guest-water energies for the individual clathrate-like sII cages. CO2@sII clathrates are predicted to be stable whatever the dispersion correction applied and in the case of single cage occupancy are found to be more stable than the CO2@sI structures. Our results reveal that DFT approaches could provide a good reasonable description of the underlying interactions, enabling the investigation of formation and transformation processes as a function of temperature and pressure.

20.
Phys Chem Chem Phys ; 23(13): 7849-7859, 2021 Apr 07.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33220666

ABSTRACT

We report the results of a detailed theoretical investigation of small K2+-doped He clusters. The structural characteristics and stabilities of such cations are determined from ab initio electronic structure calculations at the MRCI+Q level of theory. The underlying interactions show a multireference character and such effects are analyzed. The interaction potentials are constructed employing an interpolation technique within the inverse problem theory method, while the nuclear quantum effects are computed for the trimers, their spatial arrangements are discussed, and information was extracted on the orientational anisotropy of the forces. We found that energetically the most stable conformer corresponds to linear arrangements that are taking place under large amplitude vibrations, with high zero-point energy. We have further looked into the behavior of higher-order species with various He atoms surrounding the cationic dopant. By using a sum of potentials approach and an evolutionary programming method, we analyzed the structural stability of clusters with up to six He atoms in comparison with interactions energies obtained from MRCI+Q quantum chemistry computations. Structures containing Hen motifs that characterize pure rare gas clusters, appear for the larger K2+-doped He clusters, showing selective growth during the microsolvation process of the alkali-dimer cation surrounded by He atoms. Such results indicate the existence of local solvation microstructures in these aggregates, where the cationic impurity could get trapped for a short time, contributing to the slow ionic mobility observed experimentally in ultra-cold He-droplets.

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