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1.
We have performed rigorous quantum five-dimensional (5D) calculations of the translation-rotation (T-R) energy levels and wave functions of H(2), HD, and D(2) inside C(60). This work is an extension of our earlier investigation of the quantum T-R dynamics of H(2)@C(60) [M. Xu et al., J. Chem. Phys. 128, 011101 (2008)] and uses the same computational methodology. Two 5D intermolecular potential energy surfaces (PESs) were employed, differing considerably in their well depths and the degree of confinement of the hydrogen molecule. Our calculations revealed pronounced sensitivity of the endohedral T-R dynamics to the differences in the interaction potentials, and to the large variations in the masses and the rotational constants of H(2), HD, and D(2). The T-R levels vary significantly in their energies and ordering on the two PESs, as well as from one isotopomer to another. Nevertheless, they all display the same distinctive patterns of degeneracies, which can be qualitatively understood and assigned in terms the model which combines the isotropic three-dimensional harmonic oscillator, the rigid rotor, and the coupling between the orbital and the rotational angular momenta of H(2)/HD/D(2). The quantum number j associated with the rotation of H(2), HD, and D(2) was found to be a good quantum number for H(2) and D(2) on both PESs, while most of the T-R levels of HD exhibit strong mixing of two or more rotational basis functions with different j values.  相似文献   

2.
We have performed a rigorous theoretical study of the quantum translation-rotation (T-R) dynamics of one and two H2 and D2 molecules confined inside the large hexakaidecahedral (5(12)6(4)) cage of the sII clathrate hydrate. For a single encapsulated H2 and D2 molecule, accurate quantum five-dimensional calculations of the T-R energy levels and wave functions are performed that include explicitly, as fully coupled, all three translational and the two rotational degrees of freedom of the hydrogen molecule, while the cage is taken to be rigid. In addition, the ground-state properties, energetics, and spatial distribution of one and two p-H2 and o-D2 molecules in the large cage are calculated rigorously using the diffusion Monte Carlo method. These calculations reveal that the low-energy T-R dynamics of hydrogen molecules in the large cage are qualitatively different from that inside the small cage, studied by us recently. This is caused by the following: (i) The large cage has a cavity whose diameter is about twice that of the small cage for the hydrogen molecule. (ii) In the small cage, the potential energy surface (PES) for H2 is essentially flat in the central region, while in the large cage the PES has a prominent maximum at the cage center, whose height exceeds the T-R zero-point energy of H2/D2. As a result, the guest molecule is excluded from the central part of the large cage, its wave function localized around the off-center global minimum. Peculiar quantum dynamics of the hydrogen molecule squeezed between the central maximum and the cage wall manifests in the excited T-R states whose energies and wave functions differ greatly from those for the small cage. Moreover, they are sensitive to the variations in the hydrogen-bonding topology, which modulate the corrugation of the cage wall.  相似文献   

3.
A dynamics study [cross section and microscopic mechanism versus collision energy (E(T))] of the reaction O+ + H2 --> OH+ + H, which plays an important role in Earth's ionosphere and interstellar chemistry, was conducted using the quasiclassical trajectory method, employing an analytical potential energy surface (PES) recently derived by our group [R. Martinez et al., J. Chem. Phys. 120, 4705 (2004)]. Experimental excitation functions for the title reaction, as well as its isotopic variants with D2 and HD, were near-quantitatively reproduced in the calculations in the very broad collision energy range explored (E(T) = 0.01-6.0 eV). Intramolecular and intermolecular isotopic effects were also examined, yielding data in good agreement with experimental results. The reaction occurs via two microscopic mechanisms (direct and nondirect abstraction). The results were satisfactorily interpreted based on the reaction probability and the maximum impact parameter dependences with E(T), and considering the influence of the collinear [OHH]+ absolute minimum of the PES on the evolution from reactants to products. The agreement between theory and experiment suggests that the reaction mainly occurs through the lowest energy PES and nonadiabatic processes are not very important in the wide collision energy range analyzed. Hence, the PES used to describe this reaction is suitable for both kinetics and dynamics studies.  相似文献   

4.
An eight-dimensional time-dependent quantum dynamics wave packet approach is performed for the study of the H2+C2H-->H+C2H2 reaction system on a new modified potential energy surface (PES) [L.-P. Ju et al., Chem. Phys. Lett. 409, 249 (2005)]. This new potential energy surface is obtained by modifying Wang and Bowman's old PES [J. Chem. Phys. 101, 8646 (1994)] based on the new ab initio calculation. This new modified PES has a much lower transition state barrier height at 2.29 kcal/mol than Wang and Bowman's old PES at 4.3 kcal/mol. This study shows that the reactivity for this diatom-triatom reaction system is enhanced by vibrational excitations of H2, whereas the vibrational excitations of C2H only have a small effect on the reactivity. Furthermore, the bending excitations of C2H, compared to the ground state reaction probability, hinder the reactivity. The comparison of the rate constant between this calculation and experimental results agrees with each other very well. This comparison indicates that the new modified PES corrects the large barrier height problem in Wang and Bowman's old PES.  相似文献   

5.
We report quantum five-dimensional (5D) calculations of the energy levels and wave functions of the hydrogen molecule, para-H2 and ortho-H2, confined inside the small dodecahedral (H2O)20 cage of the sII clathrate hydrate. All three translational and the two rotational degrees of freedom of H2 are included explicitly, as fully coupled, while the cage is treated as rigid. The 5D potential energy surface (PES) of the H2-cage system is pairwise additive, based on the high-quality ab initio 5D (rigid monomer) PES for the H2-H2O complex. The bound state calculations involve no dynamical approximations and provide an accurate picture of the quantum 5D translation-rotation dynamics of H2 inside the cage. The energy levels are assigned with translational (Cartesian) and rotational quantum numbers, based on calculated root-mean-square displacements and probability density plots. The translational modes exhibit negative anharmonicity. It is found that j is a good rotational quantum number, while the threefold degeneracy of the j = 1 level is lifted completely. There is considerable translation-rotation coupling, particularly for excited translational states.  相似文献   

6.
Tunneling chemical reactions D + H2 --> DH + H and D + DH --> D2 + H in solid HD-H2 and D2-H2 mixtures were studied in the temperature range between 4 and 8 K. These reactions were initiated by UV photolysis of DI molecules doped in these solids for 30 s and followed by measuring the time course of electron-spin-resonance (ESR) intensities of D and H atoms. ESR intensity of D atoms produced by the photolysis decreases but that of H atoms increases with time. Time course of the D and H intensities has the fast and slow processes. The fast process, which finishes within approximately 300 s after the photolysis, is assigned to the reaction of D atom with one of its nearest-neighboring H2 molecules, D(H2)n(HD)(12-n) --> H(H2)(n-1)(HD)(13-n) or D(H2)n(D2)(12-n) --> H(HD)(H2)(n-1)(D2)(12-n) for 12 > or = n > or = 1. Rate constant for the D + H2 reaction between neighboring D atom-H2 molecule pair is determined to be (7.5 +/- 0.7) x 10(-3) s(-1) in solid HD-H2 and (1.3+/-0.3) x 10(-2) s(-1) in D2-H2 at 4.1 K, which is very close to that calculated based on the theory of chemical reaction in gas phase by Hancock et al. [J. Chem. Phys. 91, 3492 (1989)] and Takayanagi and Sato [J. Chem. Phys. 92, 2862 (1990)]. This rate constant was found to be independent of temperature up to 7 K within experimental error of +/-30%. The slow process is assigned to the reaction of D atom produced in a cage fully surrounded by HD or D2 molecules, D(HD)12 or D(D2)12. This D atom undergoes the D + DH reaction with one of its nearest-neighboring HD molecules in solid HD-H2 or diffuses to the neighbor of H2 molecules to allow the D + H2 reaction in solid HD-H2 and D2-H2. The former is the main channel in solid HD-H2 below 6 K where D atoms diffuse very slowly, whereas the latter dominates over the former above 6 K. Rate for the reactions in the slow process is independent of temperature below 6 K but increases with the increase in temperature above 6 K. We found that the increase is due to the increase in hopping rate of D atoms to the neighbor of H2 molecules. Rate constant for the D + DH reaction was found to be independent of temperature up to 7 K as well.  相似文献   

7.
We report rigorous quantum five-dimensional (5D) calculations of the coupled translation-rotation (T-R) eigenstates of a H(2) molecule adsorbed in metal organic framework-5 (MOF-5), a prototypical nanoporous material, which was treated as rigid. The anisotropic interactions between H(2) and MOF-5 were represented by the analytical 5D intermolecular potential energy surface (PES) used previously in the simulations of the thermodynamics of hydrogen sorption in this system [Belof et al., J. Phys. Chem. C 113, 9316 (2009)]. The global and local minima on this 5D PES correspond to all of the known binding sites of H(2) in MOF-5, three of which, α-, β-, and γ-sites are located on the inorganic cluster node of the framework, while two of them, the δ- and ε-sites, are on the phenylene link. In addition, 2D rotational PESs were calculated ab initio for each of these binding sites, keeping the center of mass of H(2) fixed at the respective equilibrium geometries; purely rotational energy levels of H(2) on these 2D PESs were computed by means of quantum 2D calculations. On the 5D PES, the three adjacent γ-sites lie just 1.1 meV above the minimum-energy α-site, and are separated from it by a very low barrier. These features allow extensive wave function delocalization of even the lowest translationally excited T-R eigenstates over the α- and γ-sites, presenting significant challenges for both the quantum bound-state calculations and the analysis of the results. Detailed comparison is made with the available experimental data.  相似文献   

8.
We carried out an electron spin resonance (ESR) study on hydrogen ion radicals produced by radiolysis of solid para-H(2). In addition to quartet ESR lines proposed to be H(2) (+)-core H(6) (+) (D(2d)) ions in solid para-H(2) [T. Kumada et al., Phys. Chem. Chem. Phys. 7, 776 (2005)], we newly observed totally more than 50 resolved lines in gamma-ray irradiated solid para-H(2)-ortho-D(2) (1 mol %) and para-H(2)-HD (1 mol %) mixtures. We assigned these lines to be isotope substituents of H(2) (+)-core H(6) (+) ions such as H(5)D(+), H(4)D(2) (+), and H(2)D(4) (+) throughout the comparison of their ESR parameters with theoretical results. These results provide a conclusive evidence that H(2) (+)-core H(6) (+) ions are generated in irradiated solid hydrogens. Analysis of the EPR spectrum and ab initio calculations predicts D(2d) symmetry of the H(6) (+) ions, whereas a lowering symmetry (D(2d)-->C(2v)) induced by asymmetric nuclear wave function is observed in H(5)D(+) and H(4)D(2) (+). We also observed isotope-substitution reactions such as H(6) (+)+D(2)-->H(4)D(2) (+)+H(2) and H(6) (+)+HD-->H(5)D(+)+H(2), which are analogous to the well-known isotope-condensation reactions of H(3) (+) in dark nebula, H(3) (+)+HD-->HD(2) (+)+H(2) and HD(2) (+)+HD-->D(3) (+)+H(2).  相似文献   

9.
We report vibrational configuration interaction calculations of the monomer fundamentals of (H(2)O)(2), (D(2)O)(2), (H(2)O)(3), and (D(2)O)(3) using the code MULTIMODE and full dimensional ab initio-based global potential energies surfaces (PESs). For the dimer the HBB PES [Huang et al., J. Chem. Phys 128, 034312 (2008)] is used and for the trimer a new PES, reported here, is used. The salient properties of the new trimer PES are presented and compared to previous single-point calculations and the vibrational energies are compared with experiments.  相似文献   

10.
We present the results of a time-dependent quantum mechanical investigation using centrifugal sudden approximation in the form of reaction probability as a function of collision energy (E(trans)) in the range 0.3-3.0 eV for a range of total angular momentum (J) values and the excitation function sigma(E(trans)) for the exchange reaction H(-) + H(2) (v = 0, j = 0) --> H(2) + H(-) and its isotopic variants in three dimensions on an accurate ab initio potential energy surface published recently (J. Chem. Phys. 2004, 121, 9343). The excitation function results are shown to be in excellent agreement with those obtained from crossed beam measurements by Zimmer and Linder for H(-) + D(2) collisions for energies below the threshold for electron detachment channel and somewhat larger than the most recent results of Haufler et al. for (H(-), D(2)) and (D(-), H(2)) collisions.  相似文献   

11.
A global 12-dimensional ab initio interpolated potential energy surface (PES) for the SiH(4)+H-->SiH(3)+H(2) reaction is presented. The ab initio calculations are based on the unrestricted quadratic configuration interaction treatment with all single and double excitations together with the cc-pVTZ basis set, and the modified Shepard interpolation method of Collins and co-workers [K. C. Thompson et al., J. Chem. Phys. 108, 8302 (1998); M. A. Collins, Theor. Chem. Acc. 108, 313 (2002); R. P. A. Bettens and M. A. Collins, J. Chem. Phys. 111, 816 (1999)] is applied. Using this PES, classical trajectory and variational transition state theory calculations have been carried out, and the computed rate constants are in good agreement with the available experimental data.  相似文献   

12.
All bound rovibrational levels of the H(2)O-H(2) dimer are calculated for total angular momentum J = 0-5 on two recent intermolecular potential surfaces reported by Valiron et al. [J. Chem. Phys. 129, 134306 (2008)] and Hodges et al. [J. Chem. Phys. 120, 710 (2004)] obtained through ab initio calculations. The method used handles correctly the large amplitude internal motions in this complex; it involves a discrete variable representation of the intermolecular distance coordinate R and a basis of coupled free rotor wave functions for the hindered internal rotations and the overall rotation of the dimer. The basis is adapted to the permutation symmetry associated with the para/ortho (p/o) nature of both H(2)O and H(2) as well as to inversion symmetry. Dimers containing oH(2) are more strongly bound than dimers with pH(2), as expected, with dissociation energies D(0) of 33.57, 36.63, 53.60, and 59.04 cm(-1)for pH(2)O-pH(2), oH(2)O-pH(2), pH(2)O-oH(2), and oH(2)O-oH(2), respectively, on the potential of Valiron et al. that corresponds to a binding energy D(e) of 235.14 cm(-1). Rovibrational wave functions are computed as well and the nature of the bound states in the four different dimer species is discussed. Converged rovibrational levels on both potentials agree well with the high-resolution spectrum reported by Weida and Nesbitt [J. Chem. Phys. 110, 156 (1999)]; the hindered internal rotor model that was used to interpret this spectrum is qualitatively correct.  相似文献   

13.
An experimental and theoretical investigation of the collision energy dependence of the HD(nu' = 2,j') rotational product state distribution for the H + D2 reaction in the collision energy range of Ecol = 1.30-1.89 eV has been carried out. Theoretical results based on time-dependent and time-independent quantum mechanical methods agree nearly perfectly with each other, and the agreement with the experiment is good at low collision energies and very good at high collision energies. This behavior is in marked contrast to a previous report on the HD(nu' = 3,j') product state rotational distribution [Pomerantz et al., J. Chem. Phys. 120, 3244 (2004)] where a systematic difference between experiment and theory was observed, especially at the highest collision energies. The reason for this different behavior is not yet understood. In addition, this study employs Doppler-free spectroscopy to resolve an ambiguity in the E, F-X resonantly enhanced multiphoton ionization transition originating from the HD(nu' = 2,j' = 1) state, which is found to be caused by an accidental blending with the transition coming from the HD(nu' = 1,j' = 14) state.  相似文献   

14.
In this paper, we report a combined experimental and theoretical study on the dynamics of the N(2D) + H2 insertion reaction at a collision energy of 15.9 kJ mol(-1). Product angular and velocity distributions have been obtained in crossed beam experiments and simulated by using the results of quantum mechanical (QM) scattering calculations on the accurate ab initio potential energy surface (PES) of Pederson et al. (J. Chem. Phys. 1999, 110, 9091). Since the QM calculations indicate that there is a significant coupling between the product angular and translational energy distributions, such a coupling has been explicitly included in the simulation of the experimental results. The very good agreement between experiment and QM calculations sustains the accuracy of the NH2 ab initio ground state PES. We also take the opportunity to compare the accurate QM differential cross sections with those obtained by two approximate methods, namely, the widely used quasiclassical trajectory calculations and a rigorous statistical method based on the coupled-channel theory.  相似文献   

15.
The O((3)P)+HD and O((3)P)+D(2) reactions are studied using quantum scattering calculations and chemically accurate potential energy surfaces developed for the O((3)P)+H(2) system by Rogers et al. [J. Phys. Chem. A 104, 2308 (2000)]. Cross sections and rate coefficients for OH and OD products are calculated using accurate quantum methods as well as the J-shifting approximation. The J-shifting approach is found to work remarkably well for both O+HD and O+D(2) collisions. The reactions are dominated by tunneling at low temperatures and for the O+HD reaction the hydrogen atom transfer leading to the OH product dominates at low temperatures. Our result for the OH/OD branching ratio is in close agreement with previous calculations over a wide range of temperatures. The computed OH/OD branching ratios are also in close agreement with experimental results of Robie et al. [Chem. Phys. Lett. 134, 579 (1987)] at temperatures above 400 K but the theoretical results do not reproduce the rapid rise in the experimental values of the branching ratio for temperatures lower than 350 K. We believe that new measurements could resolve the long-standing discrepancy between experiment and theory for this benchmark reaction.  相似文献   

16.
A recently reported hydrogen-ice clathrate carries up to four H(2) in each large cage and one H(2) in each small cage. We report pulsed proton NMR line shape measurements on H(2)-D(2)O clathrate formed at 1500 bar and 250 K. The behavior of the two-pulse spin-echo amplitude with respect to the nutation angle of the refocusing pulse shows that intramolecular dipolar broadening, modulated by H(2) molecular reorientations, dominates the line width of the ortho-H(2). Dipolar interaction between H(2) guests and host D atoms explains the echo variation with the relative phases of the pulses. From 12 to 120 K, the line width varies as 1/T, demonstrating that the three sublevels of J = 1 are split by a constant energy, epsilon. The splitting arises from distortion in the otherwise high-symmetry cages from frozen-out D(2)O orientational disorder. Above 120 K, further line-narrowing signals the onset of H(2) diffusion from cage to cage. At the lowest temperature, 1.9 K, the spectrum has Pake powder doublet-like features; the doublet is not fully developed, indicating a broad distribution of order parameters and energies epsilon.  相似文献   

17.
We present quasiclassical dynamics calculations of H2 and D2 scattering by the NiAl(110) surface using a recently proposed six-dimensional potential-energy surface (PES) obtained from density-functional theory calculations. The results for dissociative adsorption confirm several experimental predictions using (rotationally hot) D2 beams, namely, the existence of a dissociation barrier, the small isotopic effect, the importance of vibrational enhancement, and the existence of normal energy scaling. The latter conclusion shows that normal energy scaling is not necessarily associated with weak corrugated surfaces. The results for rotationally elastic and inelastic diffractions are also in reasonable agreement with experiment, but they show that many more diffractive transitions are responsible for the observed structures than previously assumed. This points to the validity of the PES recently proposed [P. Riviere, H. F. Busnengo, and F. Martin, J. Chem. Phys. 121, 751 (2004)] to describe dissociative adsorption as well as rotationally elastic and inelastic diffractions in the H2NiAl(110) system.  相似文献   

18.
The possible existence of a complex-forming pathway for the H+O(2) reaction has been investigated by means of both quantum mechanical and statistical techniques. Reaction probabilities, integral cross sections, and differential cross sections have been obtained with a statistical quantum method and the mean potential phase space theory. The statistical predictions are compared to exact results calculated by means of time dependent wave packet methods and a previously reported time independent exact quantum mechanical approach using the double many-body expansion (DMBE IV) potential energy surface (PES) [Pastrana et al., J. Phys. Chem. 94, 8073 (1990)] and the recently developed surface (denoted XXZLG) by Xu et al. [J. Chem. Phys. 122, 244305 (2005)]. The statistical approaches are found to reproduce only some of the exact total reaction probabilities for low total angular momenta obtained with the DMBE IV PES and some of the cross sections calculated at energy values close to the reaction threshold for the XXZLG surface. Serious discrepancies with the exact integral cross sections at higher energy put into question the possible statistical nature of the title reaction. However, at a collision energy of 1.6 eV, statistical rotationally resolved cross sections managed to reproduce the experimental cross sections for the H+O(2)(v=0,j=1)-->OH(v(')=1,j('))+O process reasonably well.  相似文献   

19.
20.
A new method for the representation of potential energy surfaces (PESs) based on the p version of the finite element method is presented and applied to the PES of the [COH2]+ system in order to study the C++H2O-->[COH]++H reaction through the quasiclassical trajectory method. Benchmark ab initio computations have been performed on the most relevant stationary points of the PES through a procedure that incorporates basis set extrapolations, the contribution of the core correlation energy, and scalar relativistic corrections. The electronic structure method employed to compute the many points needed to construct the PES is a hybrid density functional approach of the B3LYP type with geometry-dependent parameters, which improves dramatically the performance with respect of the B3LYP method. The trajectory computations shed light on the behavior of the COH2+ complex formed in the collision. At a fixed relative translational energy of 0.62 eV, which corresponds to the crossed beam experiments [D. M. Sonnenfroh et al., J. Chem. Phys. 83, 3985 (1985)], the complex dissociates significantly into the reactants (37%). However, the behavior for a thermal sampling at T=300 K is significantly different because only 9% of the trajectories where capture occurs lead to dissociation into the reactants. The latter kind of behavior is coherent with the view that simple ion-molecule reactions proceed quite often at the capture rate provided it is corrected by the fraction of the electronic states which, being nearly degenerate for the reactants, become attractive at short distances. For both T=300 K and crossed beam conditions, the trajectory computations indicate that COH2+ is the critical intermediate, in agreement with a recent work [Y. Ishikawa et al., Chem. Phys. Lett. 370, 490 (2003)] and in contrast with the interpretation of the crossed beam experiments. Besides, virtually all trajectories generate COH++H (>99%), but a significant proportion of the isoformyl cation is formed with enough vibrational energy as to surmount the COH+-HCO+ isomerization barrier, about 37% at T=300 K.  相似文献   

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