ABSTRACT
Solvation of heterocyclic amines in CO(2)-expanded methanol (MeOH) has been explored with UV/vis spectroscopy and molecular dynamics (MD) simulations. A synergistic study of experiments and simulations allows exploration of solute and solvent effects on solvation and the molecular interactions that affect absorption. MeOH-nitrogen hydrogen bonds hinder the n-pi* transition; however, CO(2) addition causes a blue shift relative to MeOH because of Lewis acid/base interactions with nitrogen. Effects of solute structure are considered, and very different absorption spectra are obtained as nitrogen positions change. MD simulations provide detailed solvent clustering behavior around the solute molecules and show that the local solvent environment and ultimately the spectra are sensitive to the solute structure. This work demonstrates the importance of atomic-level information in determining the structure-property relationships between solute structure, local salvation, and solvatochromism.
ABSTRACT
Local solvation and transport effects in gas-expanded liquids (GXLs) are reported based on molecular simulation. GXLs were found to exhibit local density enhancements similar to those seen in supercritical fluids, although less dramatic. This approach was used as an alternative to a multiphase atomistic model for these mixtures by utilizing experimental results to describe the necessary fixed conditions for a locally (quasi-) stable molecular dynamics model of the (single) GXL phase. The local anisotropic pair correlation function, orientational correlation functions, and diffusion rates are reported for two systems: CO2-expanded methanol and CO2-expanded acetone at 298 K and pressures up to 6 MPa.