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1.
Molecules ; 26(21)2021 Nov 06.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34771133

RESUMO

Soft anions exhibit surface activity at the air/water interface that can be probed using surface-sensitive vibrational spectroscopy, but the structural implications of this surface activity remain a matter of debate. Here, we examine the nature of anion-water interactions at the air/water interface using a combination of molecular dynamics simulations and quantum-mechanical energy decomposition analysis based on symmetry-adapted perturbation theory. Results are presented for a set of monovalent anions, including Cl-, Br-, I-, CN-, OCN-, SCN-, NO2-, NO3-, and ClOn- (n=1,2,3,4), several of which are archetypal examples of surface-active species. In all cases, we find that average anion-water interaction energies are systematically larger in bulk water although the difference (with respect to the same quantity computed in the interfacial environment) is well within the magnitude of the instantaneous fluctuations. Specifically for the surface-active species Br-(aq), I-(aq), ClO4-(aq), and SCN-(aq), and also for ClO-(aq), the charge-transfer (CT) energy is found to be larger at the interface than it is in bulk water, by an amount that is greater than the standard deviation of the fluctuations. The Cl-(aq) ion has a slightly larger CT energy at the interface, but NO3-(aq) does not; these two species are borderline cases where consensus is lacking regarding their surface activity. However, CT stabilization amounts to <20% of the total induction energy for each of the ions considered here, and CT-free polarization energies are systematically larger in bulk water in all cases. As such, the role of these effects in the surface activity of soft anions remains unclear. This analysis complements our recent work suggesting that the short-range solvation structure around these ions is scarcely different at the air/water interface from what it is in bulk water. Together, these observations suggest that changes in first-shell hydration structure around soft anions cannot explain observed surface activities.

2.
J Am Chem Soc ; 143(27): 10189-10202, 2021 07 14.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34184532

RESUMO

Liquid microjet photoelectron spectroscopy is an increasingly common technique to measure vertical ionization energies (VIEs) of aqueous solutes, but the interpretation of these experiments is subject to questions regarding sensitivity to bulk versus interfacial solvation environments. We have computed aqueous-phase VIEs for a set of inorganic anions, using a combination of molecular dynamics simulations and electronic structure calculations, with results that are in excellent agreement with experiment regardless of whether the simulation data are restricted to ions at the air/water interface or to those in bulk aqueous solution. Although the computed VIEs are sensitive to ion-water hydrogen bonding, we find that the short-range solvation structure is sufficiently similar in both environments that it proves impossible to discriminate between the two on the basis of the VIE, a conclusion that has important implications for the interpretation of liquid-phase photoelectron spectroscopy. More generally, analysis of the simulation data suggests that the surface activity of soft anions is largely a second or third solvation shell effect, arising from disruption of water-water hydrogen bonds and not from significant changes in first-shell anion-water hydrogen bonding.

3.
J Phys Chem A ; 124(45): 9343-9359, 2020 Nov 12.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33124827

RESUMO

State-to-state dynamics of the benchmark hydrogen exchange reaction H + H2 (v = 0-4, j = 0-3) → H2 (v', j') + H is investigated with the aid of the real wave packet approach of Gray and Balint-Kurti (J. Chem. Phys. 1998, 108, 950-962) and electronic ground BKMP2 potential energy surface of Boothroyd et al. (J. Chem. Phys. 1996, 104, 7139-7152). Initial state-selected and product state-resolved reaction probabilities, integral cross section, and product diatom vibrational and rotational level populations at a few collision energies are reported to elucidate the energy disposal mechanism. State-specific thermal rate constants are also calculated and compared with the available literature results. Coriolis coupling terms of the nuclear Hamiltonian are included, and calculations are parallelized over the helicity quantum number, Ω'. Attempts are made, in particular, to study the effect of reagent vibrational and rotational excitations on the dynamical attributes. It is found that the calculations become computationally expensive with reagent vibrational and rotational excitation. Reagent vibrational excitation is found to enhance the reactivity and has significant impact on the energy disposal to the vibrational and rotational degrees of freedom of the product. The interplay of reagent translational and vibrational energy on the product vibrational distribution unfolds an important aspect of the energy disposal mechanism. The effect of reagent rotation on the state-to-state dynamics is found not to be very significant, and the weak effect turns out to be specific to v'.

4.
J Phys Chem B ; 124(32): 6998-7004, 2020 08 13.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32787071

RESUMO

The optical properties of chromophores embedded in a water-solvated dimer of octa-acid that forms a molecular-shaped capsule are investigated. In particular, we address the anisotropic dielectric environment that appears to blue-shift excitation energies compared to the free aqueous chromophores. Recently we reported that using an effective scalar dielectric constant ε ≈ 3 appears to reproduce the measured spectra of the embedded coumarins, suggesting that the capsule provides a significant, albeit not perfect, screening of the aqueous dielectric environment. Here, we report absorption energies using a theoretical treatment that includes continuum solvation affected by an anisotropic dielectric function reflecting the high-dielectric environment outside of the capsule and the low-dielectric region within. We report time-dependent density functional theory calculations using a range-separated functional with the Poisson boundary conditions that model the anisotropic dielectric environment. Our calculations find that the anisotropic environment due to the water-solvated hydrophobic capsule is equivalent to a homogeneous effective dielectric constant of ≈3. The calculated values also appear to reproduce measured absorption of the embedded coumarin, where we study the effect of the hydrophobic capsule on the excited state.

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